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kanonieer | 3 years ago

> We’re excited to announce the availability of a new PWA feature that closes this gap and helps blur the line between apps and websites even more.

I don't see how they can use "blurred line" as a positive trait here. There are important differences between native apps and web apps, why hide this information from a regular user, especially when this information can be conveyed by 30 pixels.

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drewtato|3 years ago

Well right now, the alternative isn't "keep it in the browser", it's "ship it in electron".

int_19h|3 years ago

We're talking about web apps that are specifically intended to be installed locally and look like native apps. What are those "important differences" in this context?

(and note that you can still use PWA in the browser if you want to, and thus deny it this ability)

chpmrc|3 years ago

What difference does the runtime make to the (average) end user? I love that I can create shortcuts of some web apps that have their own window, menu bar etc. (this is already possible in Chrome) and I don't really care they are "web" apps.

LtWorf|3 years ago

> What difference does the runtime make to the (average) end user?

"Incredibly slow and draining the battery 3x as fast" vs "regular"

make3|3 years ago

because actual regular answers don't understand what any of this means, and this just means that the devs have more control over what experience they give them