It's probably just because social media consumption looks like this today:
https://static.independent.co.uk/2024/07/23/11/newFile-3.jpg
and not like this, anymore:
https://headlineplanet.com/home/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/M...
It's probably just because social media consumption looks like this today:
https://static.independent.co.uk/2024/07/23/11/newFile-3.jpg
and not like this, anymore:
https://headlineplanet.com/home/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/M...
How does that change anything? I think its more due to mobile sites acting like this https://www.reddit.com/r/TechNope/comments/urboo6/reddit_app...
A user on a app is more valuable since you get a lot more data on them, and can stop their ad blockers.
But people are used to that now being the normal state of things, it's rare that they even try the browser -- I develop an application that is web only and typically used on desktops, and people incessantly ask me for "an app so they can use it on their phone".
They probably want an icon to open your app. They probably dont know the difference between an app rendered with a browser or a truly native app. In the past apple as made it difficult for users to know how to do this and users just know about the app store. Great for apple (walled garden) and social media apps (more tracking, unlimited ads) but not great for users.
Yes, that's the "workaround" I use but by default people are expecting to find something in the app store.
> They probably dont know the difference between an app rendered with a browser or a truly native app.
Absolutely, users do not know or care what technology you are using so long as it meets their expectations of use. Users are going to the app store as a discovery mechanism for "something that gives them an icon on the phone to get to that thing", most have no clue what "native code" means.