 On the web, you meet your users where they are, independently of the devices they choose. And with PWA, your app can also interact with other apps and functionality on different platforms. I'm Adriana Jara from the Chrome team, and I'm with Diego Gonzalez from the Microsoft Edge team. To walk you through a few features to impress your users with your web app, wherever it is running. Diego, take it away with our first feature. You can save your user's time by adding a quick access to frequently used actions from the app's icon on the home screen, or start menu with shortcuts. Users access the shortcuts by either long pressing the app icon on mobile, or right clicking on desktop environments. To implement shortcuts, you add an array to the manifest file called, well, shortcuts. And for each item, you specify the icon and name that identify the action and the URL that will execute the task. Get your users to start a post, share their work, reorder products, or accomplish any task quicker. Adri, you take the next feature. Editing files was not a strength for web apps. It required app loads and downloads for each edit. All of that changed with the File System Access API. It allows users to open a file, edit it directly on the web app, and save it straight to the File System, as simple as any platform app. With File Handlers, users can select their web app to be the default handler for a file type. To register as a File Handler, the app needs to add a snippet like this one to the manifest. It specifies the type of files it can handle, and then it has to implement the action to handle the file. Once that setup is complete, the user will see the app as an option to open with from platform menus. Check out the documentation for more details. Diego, what is that feature that allows you to customize the app's title bar? Oh, that's Window Control's overlay. The feature allows you to free the area that would generally be occupied by the title bar of the operating system. This, in turn, allows you to put arbitrary web content in this area, hence giving you the ability to either emulate a title bar with custom controls like text boxes and menus, or create a more immersive UX for the application itself. And as usual, all of this is enabled with standard web technologies, which means all your CSS and JavaScript knowledge comes in handy. There's even a media query that allows you to check if the feature is enabled to lay out your content accordingly. PWA offers so many more features, for example, sharing with other apps, window placement control, protocol handling, run-on login, and much more. When it comes to your web app, you have the ideas, we have the documentation. For more information, please visit web.dev.learn.pwa and ak.ms.pwa. Stay tuned for more updates. And to join the community, check out the link in the description to our PWA Discord. Until next time! Bye!