Microsoft is really pushing PWA's into Windows, which is great. For those new here, the video series explains progressive apps in a simple way to anyone who is already a web developer. Thanks to Microsoft for being developer-friendly in the past years. Let's not forget that PWA exists thanks to Google as well. Both companies that embrace the web and open standards. They are fully supported on ChromeOS, Windows, Android, macOS and, of course, most Linux distros as open-source developers are always the first ones to adopt new technologies. Apple...is another story.... They are on the dark side. They see PWA's as a threat to their app store closed walled garden model, reason why Safari does not support most technologies, but either way, at least you are controlling your app and users, not Apple, so PWAs are the only way to go for many apps in the future for iOS as Apple is getting more and more abusive towards developers. And thanks to new EU regulations, starting in March of this year, at least European users will finally be able to get full rendering engines for other browsers, it means either Chromium-based browsers or Firefox can support PWA's.
I'd love a Dev series for making a web application made with Web Assembly into a PWA. The accessibility across devices these technologies allow is amazing!
Yeaaah!! I prefer to write my UI twice, once for the web and once for the mobile or better yet I prefer to have a native mobile app with only 2% of the web functionality... that sounds a thousand times better
Microsoft is really pushing PWA's into Windows, which is great. For those new here, the video series explains progressive apps in a simple way to anyone who is already a web developer. Thanks to Microsoft for being developer-friendly in the past years. Let's not forget that PWA exists thanks to Google as well. Both companies that embrace the web and open standards.
They are fully supported on ChromeOS, Windows, Android, macOS and, of course, most Linux distros as open-source developers are always the first ones to adopt new technologies. Apple...is another story....
They are on the dark side. They see PWA's as a threat to their app store closed walled garden model, reason why Safari does not support most technologies, but either way, at least you are controlling your app and users, not Apple, so PWAs are the only way to go for many apps in the future for iOS as Apple is getting more and more abusive towards developers.
And thanks to new EU regulations, starting in March of this year, at least European users will finally be able to get full rendering engines for other browsers, it means either Chromium-based browsers or Firefox can support PWA's.
I'd love a Dev series for making a web application made with Web Assembly into a PWA. The accessibility across devices these technologies allow is amazing!
Love this series! Thank you very much guys! 👍👍 PWA is amazing!
Thank you for this high quality content. Really good details, clear animations, and presentation.
Microsoft is awesome! Thanks!
Waiting for a complete practical for creating PWA.
It can be a game changer! Wow!
Did you know that net7 using blazor and razor have issue when access using safari on iphone???? Please fix it ASAP
cool video)
Nice video :)
Seria legal se este conteúdo fosse em português ou pelo menos tivesse uma versão em português com IA
Then why not windows phone? You have pwa right?
You guys, just say web technologies are HTML, CSS and JS.
Then why you develop .Net MAUI and Blazor?
I am confused what to choose?
Thank you somuacht
I have a question is a desktop app also generated in addition to the web and mobile app stores?
Why is no one talking about the Countryball youtuber PWA?
please remove the background music, its annoying
Too bad Windows is still horrible. Tech needs to slow down.
Great! More spam. When are you planning to stop promoting malware and return to making real, native apps?
Yeah, I love writing an app 5 fkn times for every platform.
@ryanleemartin7758 Dude's afraid about his job 😢😂
Yeaaah!! I prefer to write my UI twice, once for the web and once for the mobile or better yet I prefer to have a native mobile app with only 2% of the web functionality... that sounds a thousand times better