
If your PWA passes, Chrome will fire the beforeinstallprompt event, which you can add to with prompt().ĪV1 is a royalty-free codec developed by the Alliance for Open Media. If you’re a developer, you should check out the standard PWA criteria that Chrome will check.

Google killed off Chrome apps earlier this year and is now focusing on PWAs instead. These apps can launch from the Start menu, and run like all other installed apps (without an address bar or tabs).

The browser now supports Progressive Web Apps (PWAs) on Windows. In addition to trying to fix what it broke, Google has added a slew of new features in Chrome 70.
