In most cases I prefer to use my browser over specific mobile apps. This is because browsers have lots of useful features that are missing in mobile apps:
- No install, no cluttering of device app list
- Search text on page
- URL to share for any page, not just the ones that the app author thought of
- Back and forward buttons
- Page visit history
- Copy and paste from page
- Zoom in/out
- Request desktop version to get access to all features
- Integration with accessibility tools? (This is a guess. I don't use any)
There may be more that I've forgotten.
Many perfectly good websites are following a trend of offering mobile apps that give a few benefits (usually notifications), but in doing so we lose out on all of the general benefits of the web listed above. They are also increasingly nagging people to switch over to the app. When I visit SO on mobile I sometimes get a big pop-up where I have to carefully select the option in small text that says something like: "No. Use the mobile site instead"
I recently noticed the new SO "Instant app" on Android, which is even worse because it starts without permission, just to give you a worse version of the site: It has some weird styling not consistent with SO and none of the benefits listed above.
I really don't understand this trend. Are actual users keen to switch over to apps? Why?
What does an SO app give you over the website that couldn't be achieved with a home screen web link, except for notifications? What if the mobile app was just reduced to something that provides notifications that open links in the system browser? Can anyone make a reasoned defence for a mobile app for reading questions? What am I missing?