| > An app for each Credit Card I hold If a bank/credit union/etc doesn't have a native app in 2016, I doubt they have a web app that's usable on a phone either. > A native app for each news site I read Right, because RSS readers and aggregators aren't totally a thing. > A native app for every social media site Those literally exist today. > A native app for all the map searches, directions, etc. we all use You realise you don't need a new app for each search you want to do? I don't even understand this premise. > Security updates? Nightmare Right, because having half-baked web-apps with millions of user's personal data all stuck in a big fat juicy database in one spot, just waiting to be breached and spread like herpes in a brothel has worked out so fucking well. Every major mobile platform and the two leading commercial desktop platforms have app store infrastructure which provide automatic updates of client-installed apps. > Multi-OS support? forget about it. Right, because no app ever has been developed cross platform, and every web app ever created works perfectly in every browser with zero effort from the developer. > We'd all be back to a Windows monopoly. Wat. Edit: additionally, a number of the things you describe, i.e. news sites, aren't web-apps in the way most people think. They offer very limited if any interaction or functionality for the user except navigating to find/read other news content, and possibly leave feedback. Those sorts of things are what the web excels at, because they're essentially used for one-way content viewing. |