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by jklinger410
2729 days ago
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To recap. The claim is that PWAs are preferable to apps because "people don't test drive apps." In fact, people test drive apps as a rule, and none of them install PWAs. I have shown a 2 second googled piece of evidence showing the degree to which people test drive apps. No evidence to support the ease of use or frequency of PWA homescreen pins exists/has been provided. I'm going to stop responding to this thread unless your comment contains a substantive argument supporting OP. |
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Ah. Now I see where the confusion lies. I don't think that's what the OP was saying.
> Given the fact that most people are already maxed out on apps on their device with just things like facebook and youtube, you're going to be hard pressed to get people to install your app just to try it out.
No one in this thread is claiming that people who install apps don't test drive them. Your evidence proves that they do, and no one has challenged or disagreed with that evidence.
The claim is not related to how often people who download an app test it out and delete it soon after. You're focused on the wrong detail. The claim is that they aren't even downloading apps to test them in the first place.
> I'm going to stop responding to this thread unless your comment contains a substantive argument supporting OP.
The OP is the only one arguing OP's perspective right now. Everyone else is just trying to get you to understand what the OP is actually saying rather than what you claim they're saying.
Let's try an analogy:
> Millennials are increasingly choosing not to eat at casual dining chains such as Applebees.
Responding to that by saying that Applebees is the most popular casual dining chain by a given metric does not disprove this claim. Whether people choose Applebees more often than Chilis has nothing to do with the fact that they're both losing millennial customers.