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@windowsdev In Windows, nothing. Well, mostly nothing. As I mentioned, if your PWA is installed via the Microsoft Store, your app has access to a ton of internal APIs via JavaScript.
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@windowsdev It also shows up in the Task Manager, can be uninstalled, and you can see details about its disk usage.
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@windowsdev On other platforms, as I mentioned, PWAs appear like a dedicated browser window much like Chrome Apps a few years back and Fluid apps if you’re a Mac user.
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@windowsdev In fact, if you use the "browser" as your display value in the Web App Manifest, it will often launch as a new tab in the browser that "installed" it.
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@windowsdev I’m honestly hopeful that more operating systems begin to treat PWAs as first class apps. In the meantime, you can place your PWA in a native app wrapper and submit it to the Play Store for Android and App Store for iOS.