It's really possible to build desktop apps with browser tech now, the holy grail for so many years. Proof is in something like Photoshop for the Web. Amazing.
Agreed! I used the File System API when building a portfolio tool that
needed to handle resume uploads. The ability to read files directly in
the browser without sending them to a server first was a game-changer
for privacy-conscious users.
One gotcha I ran into: browser support is still spotty. Had to implement
fallbacks for Firefox and Safari users (they don't fully support it yet).
Ended up with a hybrid approach - File System API for Chrome/Edge,
traditional file input for others.
The permission model is also interesting - users have to explicitly grant
access, which builds trust but adds friction to UX. Worth it though.
It's really possible to build desktop apps with browser tech now, the holy grail for so many years. Proof is in something like Photoshop for the Web. Amazing.
Agreed! I used the File System API when building a portfolio tool that needed to handle resume uploads. The ability to read files directly in the browser without sending them to a server first was a game-changer for privacy-conscious users.
One gotcha I ran into: browser support is still spotty. Had to implement fallbacks for Firefox and Safari users (they don't fully support it yet). Ended up with a hybrid approach - File System API for Chrome/Edge, traditional file input for others.
The permission model is also interesting - users have to explicitly grant access, which builds trust but adds friction to UX. Worth it though.
What are you using it for?
For now just a bulk file renamer tool and a photo organizer (swipe to keep or delete) but I’m looking out for more ideas.