Installing the app on iOS is a pain point for users. If you have a significant iOS user presence it's a concern.
If Apple supported this API it would be much easier to convince stakeholders that PWA is enough.
You can do browser detection and show a dismissible pop up with instructions but it will still just confuse some users and others with scoff at the need to do that.
That’s interesting, thanks. I just did it successfully, I don’t think I’ve ever installed an app like this before. So I guess when I click it it’s just opening a browser window with no actual browser controls and then loading the site?
Why do they use the words progressive web app, seems like a fancy term for just saving a link to your home screen. Is there some additional benefit you get besides this shortcut? Does it do things a webpage does not once it’s been added to your home screen?
It basically is nothing more than a glorified shortcut. The installed app gets a custom load screen. It gets listed on the device installed apps list, and can be removed from there.
But there is nothing a PWA can do that a website can’t do. It’s all about Web APIs. Take push notifications (https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/Progressive_web...): they make more sense for an (PW)app, but a simple website can do them too (if given permission).
If Apple supported this API it would be much easier to convince stakeholders that PWA is enough.
You can do browser detection and show a dismissible pop up with instructions but it will still just confuse some users and others with scoff at the need to do that.