Anonymous reader cites Android Police report. Seven years ago, Google announced that it would phase out all Chrome apps on Windows, Mac, and Linux by 2018 (actually it would take until 2023). Instead, there will be web apps, which the company calls progressive web apps (PWAs), that can be installed on a user's desktop and essentially behave as if they were natural apps and programs. The idea quickly spread, and by early 2022, a record number of Chrome users had installed his PWA. Soon all websites will be able to be installed on your desktop via his PWA.
Chrome Canary (a daily build version of Google Chrome that is typically several versions older than the stable build) now lets you install websites on your desktop.As part of the latest daily build, Google has released a desktop version of[保存して共有]to submenu[ページをアプリとしてインストール]Added option (via @Leopeva64 on X). This way, clicking on an app will always open a website in its own window that is made to look like a native app. Sites that already have their own PWAs, such as YouTube and Reddit, have been encouraging users to install their PWAs for some time, and the “Install Page as an App” feature actually displays the site's name. It will be so. For example, the entry for YouTube will be displayed as “Install YouTube.” In February, it became possible to enable the flags required to turn a website into a PWA, and it looks like it has finally been fully implemented.