Apple’s Safari web browser is missing some advanced features compared to Chrome, Firefox, and other browsers. Thankfully, one major shortcoming is being fixed: push notifications.
Apple confirmed last year that it wasworking on standard web push notification support for Safari on all platforms, including Mac, iPhone, and iPad. Before that point, Safari was only compatible withApple’s proprietary push technology, which few websites ever supported. The new feature works with standard web push notifications – the same ones sites already use to send alerts through Chrome, Firefox, or Microsoft Edge. It already arrived inmacOS Ventura, and now Apple is testing iOS 16.4 beta and iPadOS 16.4 beta, which finally brings the functionality to iPhones and iPads.
Web notifications are useful for web applications, but they are incredibly unpopular everywhere else.Mozilla said in 2019that requests to allow push notifications from sites were rejected more than 97% of the time by Firefox users. That’s likely why Apple is implementing the feature differently than most mobile browsers on Android devices – sites cannot request to send notifications unless they are bookmarked to the home screen. Presumably, if you like a site or web app so much that you’d add it to your home screen, chances are you’d be open to the idea of receiving push notifications.
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That’s not all the improvements coming to Safari on iPhone and iPad, though. Web apps on the home screen can now set a badge on the icon, just like native apps, and use more advanced video and screen APIs. Finally, if you add a site to the home screen that hasn’t created a special icon, Safari will now generate one from the site’s name and colors instead of using a simple screenshot.
The new features are available in Safari 16.4, which is currently only in the beta versions of iOS 16.4 and iPadOS 16.4, but should roll out to everyone soon.