Progressive Web Applications are just web sites that progressively become apps. But how does this happen? It takes skilled developers that understand a new way to create web sites that are fast, reliable and engaging.
In this course you will learn what progressive web applications are, why you need to master them and why your stakeholders want progressive web applications over traditional web sites and native applications.
Businesses of all sizes are discovering the power progressive web applications bring to help them reach and engage their audiences. This means they can increase revenues while decreasing costs. Brands like Twitter, Lyft, The Washington Post, Forbes and Weather channel have all discovered the benefits upgrading to a progressive web application bring.
The success these companies are having is driving more demand for developers skilled in service workers, web manifest, push notifications and more.
You will learn how to craft an app shell so your experience can progressively load with an instant presence. I expose you to everything you need to know about progressive web applications and service workers.
This course starts each section addressing the beginner, assuming you have no prior knowledge of the topic. Each section progresses and covers more and more detail until there is just about no nook or cranny not exposed.
Instructor Details
Courses : 1
Specification: Progressive Web Apps (PWA) – From Beginner to Expert
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18 reviews for Progressive Web Apps (PWA) – From Beginner to Expert
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Price | $14.99 |
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Provider | |
Duration | 21 hours |
Year | 2018 |
Level | Beginner |
Language | English |
Certificate | Yes |
Quizzes | Yes |
$89.99 $14.99
Leox Fernandez –
Up until now, the author just keeps on reading…
Matti Jauhiainen –
Most of the content does not seem to really relate to progressive web apps, many lectures focus on details that don’t seem relevant and which most developers should already know anyway.
Steen Maigaard –
i did not know visual studio code, so I learned how it works
Dan Hibbert –
all good so far
Jeff Mees –
I am already convinced this is something worth investigating… one slide of highlights about why this is the time for PWA would have done it. Editing this down and pointing to external resources would make this much more approachable.
aaron gong –
Don’t waste time on this. Unnecessarily long.
Erick Martinez –
Lorsque que le formateur dit qu’il va mettre jour le repository du cours, a serait bien qu’il le fasse. C’est comme s’il ne tenait pas compte des remarques des l ves. Je suis d u par cette attitude.
Michael Sutherland –
The course is a good broad overview of PWAs. But it felt like the production was rushed. There were several basic quality issues: Media problems. The mic scratches frequently, like there’s a loose connection. One lecture was just a black screen for the first 2/3. The instructor never bothers to move his mouse pointer out of view, which gets to be a problem when you’re following along and see two cursors on the screen. Disjointed curriculum. Modules are not consistently ordered logically so concepts are presented without background and you have to kind of fill in the gaps later. Repeated lectures. Several pairs of lectures are just the same video repeated. Examples: lecture 109/111, 121/122, 154/156, 163/164. Really makes you feel like he didn’t put much effort into it.
Ben Scott –
Very thorough coverage of all relevant topics.
Leon V Baravykas –
Till now I found it is high level, let see what happens later.
Brianne Stevenson –
I have very little knowledge, so it is a little over my head but I’d like to begin playing around so it becomes practical
Andrew Kvochick –
There s a lot of good material in here, but it s very poorly organized. As a result, it becomes repetitive. Furthermore, the work on the individual chapters is sloppy at times. Duplicate videos. Videos that end mid sentence. Videos that go on well after the talking has stopped. You might want to skip to lecture 95ish to avoid a lot of repetitive hype about progressive web applications. And ignore anything about Safari because all of that information is outdated.
Candice Fryer –
Yes
Deivid Luis de Freitas Rodrigues –
I’m getting to know his way to teach. However, even understanding the most of things in english, i do miss the subtitles that could be in english.
Elisa Pasquali –
EAsy to understand, right sort of pace.
Miguel Alejandro –
There are lots of v deos, where the core concepts can be explain in 5 minutos but the author takes double o triple. I regret have not audited the course before, now I lost my chances of refund. The audio quality is awful most of the times. Very poor use of visuals, there are long v deos with very few images and a lot of bla bla bla, without going to the point.
Jon Nyman –
A bit long and very thorough. You can skip to the parts which interest you, of course. Most of the course is good quality there are some random quality issues like videos cutting off, audio issues. But 24 hours of content there are going to be hick ups. I think it would have been nice if the author of the course would have organized the lectures a little more so there would be less repetition. But then again the repetition is kind of nice just so I can remember the concepts more. Of course, this is my first time through the course just to get a general over and then I will go back and rewatch/reread the parts that I need to.
Adriano Wagner Agra de Andrade –
Excellent course ! Rich in details !