Google changed where Chrome stores data. Chrome handles data for HTML apps. Uh oh.
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One Chrome developer, Tobias Sargeant, asked the crowd of developers: "Are you aware that you can test with beta versions of webview? This change was made in beta 6 weeks ago, and had the issue been picked up at that point we would have been able to address it before it significantly impacted users."
One Chrome developer, Tobias Sargeant, asked the crowd of developers: "Are you aware that you can test with beta versions of webview? This change was made in beta 6 weeks ago, and had the issue been picked up at that point we would have been able to address it before it significantly impacted users."
Yeah, or maybe you could do your own fucking QA. Ha ha ha, this is Google we're talking about.
One Chrome developer, Tobias Sargeant, asked the crowd of developers: "Are you aware that you can test with beta versions of webview? This change was made in beta 6 weeks ago, and had the issue been picked up at that point we would have been able to address it before it significantly impacted users."
Yeah, or maybe you could do your own fucking QA. Ha ha ha, this is Google we're talking about.
One Chrome developer, Tobias Sargeant, asked the crowd of developers: "Are you aware that you can test with beta versions of webview? This change was made in beta 6 weeks ago, and had the issue been picked up at that point we would have been able to address it before it significantly impacted users."
Yeah, or maybe you could do your own fucking QA. Ha ha ha, this is Google we're talking about.
Honestly, though, aren't most apps these days, "cloud apps", and as such, most local data can be restored from the cloud if the app detects its "lost" on startup (which is how it would appear after this update)?
One Chrome developer, Tobias Sargeant, asked the crowd of developers: "Are you aware that you can test with beta versions of webview? This change was made in beta 6 weeks ago, and had the issue been picked up at that point we would have been able to address it before it significantly impacted users."
Yeah, or maybe you could do your own fucking QA. Ha ha ha, this is Google we're talking about.
Agreed this is a pretty pathetic response from Google. What he's suggesting implies every developer releasing an app on their platform has to perpetually keep testing their own applications, regardless of whether they are rolling out new versions themselves or not, because every six weeks Google might just break things for you.
I can understand the developer is just frustrated with the situation, but blaming it on your platform users is just plain unprofessional.
I know this is bad news for many legitimate apps and users of those apps.
However, I hope this encourages more people to use actual websites rather than an app which is a glorified browser for one site... often with unnecessary permissions.
I hope even more that this encourages sites not to pester you to install their crappy app, to view the very site you're already on.
Google changed where Chrome stores data. Chrome handles data for HTML apps.Uh ohAw, snap!
One Chrome developer, Tobias Sargeant, asked the crowd of developers: "Are you aware that you can test with beta versions of webview? This change was made in beta 6 weeks ago, and had the issue been picked up at that point we would have been able to address it before it significantly impacted users."
Yeah, or maybe you could do your own fucking QA. Ha ha ha, this is Google we're talking about.
Agreed this is a pretty pathetic response from Google. What he's suggesting implies every developer releasing an app on their platform has to perpetually keep testing their own applications, regardless of whether they are rolling out new versions themselves or not, because every six weeks Google might just break things for you.
I can understand the developer is just frustrated with the situation, but blaming it on your platform users is just plain unprofessional.
I know this is bad news for many legitimate apps and users of those apps.
However, I hope this encourages more people to use actual websites rather than an app which is a glorified browser for one site... often with unnecessary permissions.
I hope even more that this encourages sites not to pester you to install their crappy app, to view the very site you're already on.
I guess the lesson for developers is to avoid using local storage in WebView for their apps.
One Chrome developer, Tobias Sargeant, asked the crowd of developers: "Do you guys not have phones?"
Does LARGE_TECH_COMPANY actually have a QA team?
...
Edge Explorer for the win!Google apologizes profusely for this oversight. In response, Google will be discontinuing Android Chrome in the coming months, replacement TBD.
One Chrome developer, Tobias Sargeant, asked the crowd of developers: "Are you aware that you can test with beta versions of webview? This change was made in beta 6 weeks ago, and had the issue been picked up at that point we would have been able to address it before it significantly impacted users."
One Chrome developer, Tobias Sargeant, asked the crowd of developers: "Are you aware that you can test with beta versions of webview? This change was made in beta 6 weeks ago, and had the issue been picked up at that point we would have been able to address it before it significantly impacted users."
Yeah, or maybe you could do your own fucking QA. Ha ha ha, this is Google we're talking about.
Honestly, though, aren't most apps these days, "cloud apps", and as such, most local data can be restored from the cloud if the app detects its "lost" on startup (which is how it would appear after this update)?
Ironically this is hitting those who DID NOT want this information in the cloud. If it was in the cloud this wouldn't be an issue other than some issues with where offline data was stored until you have a cloud connection again.
Does Google actually have a QA team?
The lack of rigor in QA across a large number of teams/products speaks to a fundamental and pervasive flaw in their development processes. Whether it's Stadia, Pixel, Android - the same seemingly QA-able flaws keep cropping up. Apparently with increasing regularity.
Does Google actually have a QA team?
The lack of rigor in QA across a large number of teams/products speaks to a fundamental and pervasive flaw in their development processes. Whether it's Stadia, Pixel, Android - the same seemingly QA-able flaws keep cropping up. Apparently with increasing regularity.
I mean, changing the default path for anything - in any application - would be a focus point for even the most novice of QA teams. For an application that's a dependency for 10's or 100's of thousands of applications? They're pawning this off on 3rd party devs for not using the test branch? Seriously? Prior communication of a breaking change to developers is just that hard?
I'd love for a long-time Googler to elaborate on how Google's devolved over the past few years. Things like this make it readily apparent that the smart, efficient, effective Google of the 2000's which could do no wrong, do no evil, and valued R&D - seemingly no longer exists.
One Chrome developer, Tobias Sargeant, asked the crowd of developers: "Are you aware that you can test with beta versions of webview? This change was made in beta 6 weeks ago, and had the issue been picked up at that point we would have been able to address it before it significantly impacted users."
Paraphrased: "You got six entire weeks before a massive, breaking change rolled out from first introduction to end-user rollout. What the hell do you people want from us?"
Time to actually test proposed changes, for one. Six weeks is a ridiculously short window.
And why, exactly, can't data be merged?Lead Manager Changwan Ryu warned in the bug comments that a fix would be "a very destructive change" since Chrome 79 had "already been rolled out [to] 50% [of users], and data cannot be merged."
From someone who works at Google (not me though): the only team that has an actual, well-staffed and organized QA team is Ads. Everyone else skates by with ad-hoc processes, devs doing their own QA, customers filling in as QA, etc.
I would guess that they haven't tested the effects. Not that it stopped them the first time.And why, exactly, can't data be merged?Lead Manager Changwan Ryu warned in the bug comments that a fix would be "a very destructive change" since Chrome 79 had "already been rolled out [to] 50% [of users], and data cannot be merged."