Google has revealed that Chrome Apps will soon appear in the
iOS App Store and Android Google Play marketplace, masquerading as native
smartphone apps.
The initiative to get the Apps on mobile platforms began
today, with a developer preview based on Apache Cordova.
Chromium engineer Andrew Grieve described Cordova in a blogpost as an open-source development framework for building mobile apps
using HTML, CSS and JavaScript.
The toolchain Google has introduced takes Chrome apps and
repackages them as native smartphone apps for iOS and Android, making it easy
for Chrome App developers to re-release their apps on those mobile platforms.
For developers' eyes only ... for now
In 2013 Google introduced a "new breed" of Chrome
Apps that look and act like native applications and work offline across every
desktop operating system.
Now it's applying the same principles to mobile.
For Chrome App developers looking to get in on the mobile
action, Google has provided a convenient developerworkflow.
Google has also converted many core Chrome Apps APIs,
including sign-in, storage, push messages and alarms to run on mobile devices.
Other APIs, like notifications and payments, are currently
Android only, but will likely come to iOS at some point as well. Cordova
features its own set of mobile APIs, too.
Google said it expects to continue to improve this toolchain
as the developer preview gets going and it receives feedback from devs.
In the meantime, eager Android and iOS smartphone users can
lay in wait for Chrome Apps to begin arriving in their respective app stores.
First Posted By : Michael Rougeau in :
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