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It's about making web applications that can be installed on a phone's home screen and will then act as if they're a native app rather than a website with too much JavaScript.
Ah so like PhoneGap did in 2009?
I'm still struggling with "responsive web design" being nothing to do with how responsive it is. Or that AngularJS has nothing to do with angles.
It's about making web applications that can be installed on a phone's home screen and will then act as if they're a native app rather than a website with too much JavaScript.
Not to be confused with "progressive enhancement" which is about building your web application in such a way that it's still a perfectly usable website when the excess of JavaScript with which it has been burdened fails to load because the user has just entered the Northern Line tunnel southbound at Golders Green.
EDIT: as a concept, it's the usual over-engineered tripe from Google (see Angular.js) so you can find out more about it at https://developers.google.com/web/progressive-web-apps/ - various other companies such as MS are busily guzzling down the Kool Aid, so we can expect to have to put up with a lot more of this garbage before the next shiny thing means its finally consigned to the dustbin of technology history where it belongs.
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