It does provide a cross-platform application development stack with easy to use networking and deployment capabilities while being sandboxed and requiring little to no admin on the user terminal.
There was no real equivalent to this before. In corporate environments, this was often the Java stack that was used and it was often a really painful experience.
PWAs are the same for Mobile, the current experience of developing mobile apps using the native SDKs is really subpar and it is expensive.
PWAs will become the default for mobile apps because, in most cases, there's no reason to go through the pain and cost of creating native mobile apps.
> PWAs will become the default for mobile apps because, in most cases, there's no reason to go through the pain and cost of creating native mobile apps.
Unless you need, you know, actual performance, fast animations or even things like proper controls which the web has none of.
There was no real equivalent to this before. In corporate environments, this was often the Java stack that was used and it was often a really painful experience.
PWAs are the same for Mobile, the current experience of developing mobile apps using the native SDKs is really subpar and it is expensive. PWAs will become the default for mobile apps because, in most cases, there's no reason to go through the pain and cost of creating native mobile apps.