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by TheGlav 859 days ago
Of course they could. They looked at the cost of rewriting the entire integration and framework for running PWAs and said, "eh, nah."
1 comments

They'll have to allow some kind of app installation API to allow for alternative app stores. If Google implements some kind of WebAPK technology on iOS, they may just be able to launch a Google Play for iOS to work around these PWAs as a workaround, and Safari will be down a feature.

I have the feeling Apple is betting on Google not caring enough about the PWA platform to try to compete. Maybe they're right, but if they're not, they're only making the browser wars worse for themselves.

> I have the feeling Apple is betting on Google not caring enough about the PWA platform to try to compete.

I don't think it's about Google, I think they assume consumers won't care, and they're probably right.

My guess is it's easier for developers to throw their website into Cordova than to start paying Apple a Core Technology Fee and convince users to download an alternative app marketplace to support what is effectively a differently packaged Cordova app.