> But I also consider Apple’s iron grip on the platform to be against the spirit of computing
But the problem here is the App Store, right? Both native iOS apps and PWAs need access to the hardware, which is provided by Apple.
Really my understanding is that people push hard for PWAs either because they want to work around the App Store, or because they are web dev (and every dev tends to be imperialist with their favourite language, that's not only a web thing).
> People just like the open web. PWAs are part of the open web.
"Open" is relative in this context: I can't just go merge any code I want into Chromium so that I can distribute my cool app with my very custom feature to all the Chromium users, can I?
Because some people like PWAs (and what they represent) does not mean that private companies should be forced to support them.
> There is no guarantee that your app won't disappear from the App Store tomorrow.
That is completely different debate, unrelated to PWAs, right?
But the problem here is the App Store, right? Both native iOS apps and PWAs need access to the hardware, which is provided by Apple.
Really my understanding is that people push hard for PWAs either because they want to work around the App Store, or because they are web dev (and every dev tends to be imperialist with their favourite language, that's not only a web thing).