They Prefer the App · iDiallo.com
Business, Finance & Industries · Jul 14, 2026
The document argues many major services push native app installs not for added functionality but to enable pervasive data extraction—apps become oversized wrappers around websites that increase surveillance and engagement capture, so download growth can mislead investors about true product defensibility.
They Prefer the App · iDiallo.com
Science, Technology & Innovation · Jul 14, 2026
Notification overload and single‑purpose app sprawl have become normalized, so high volumes of unread alerts often reflect user adaptation rather than distress—meaning product teams should rethink attention/loyalty signals and small businesses can still drive adoption with narrow utility or discount-driven prompts even if an app adds little long‑term value.
They Prefer the App · iDiallo.com
Science, Technology & Innovation · Jul 14, 2026
Users increasingly treat apps as the default and websites as secondary previews, so a web-only product risks poor adoption unless onboarding, branding, and reminders explicitly teach that the web version is complete.
They Prefer the App · iDiallo.com
Science, Technology & Innovation · Jul 14, 2026
For low‑complexity, information‑focused products (e.g., school information), packaging them as native apps often worsens usability—app wrappers remove browser affordances and force full app updates—so a website or PWA that preserves copy/paste, link behavior, and centrally updated content usually offers a better, less brittle experience.