 Welcome to Ask Chrome. Show where you get to ask questions for the Chrome team, and we do our best to answer them. My name is Mariko. I work for Chrome's web developer relations team. Today's topic is Project Fugu. Speaking of that, Pete, please introduce yourself. Absolutely. I'm Pete, a developer advocate on the web team, and I work on Fugu and our progressive web app projects. Right, so let's get into it. Starting with, what is Fugu Project? The web is a really powerful thing, but there are some capabilities that aren't available today. And developers find that there are certain things that they can't build. Our goal is to close that gap so that developers can build any experience that they want on the web. But bringing those powerful capabilities to the web also means we need to do it in a careful way. So things like bringing file system access so that you could build an IDE or something like that needs to be done in a way that's safe for the web. And no matter what website you go to, you're not going to set yourself up for anything bad or scary to happen. All right, so the next question is from Twitter. John asked, which Fugu APIs have the best chance of becoming a standard that is adapted by both Chrome, the mobile Android, and the mobile Safari? That's a great question. With all of these, we're working on them through a group called the Web Platform Incubator Group. I always mispronounce it, but it's YCG, is how you do the short name for it. And its charter is to allow developers to incubate and propose new experimental ideas and ultimately transition them to a working group where they're going to go through formal standardization. One of the things that we need to do with these is really find developer support. So is this something that's important to you? And so we're always looking for those when we do that. OK, but what about the second part of that question, the mobile Safari Android? So we frequently engage with Apple and other browser vendors to get their feedback. But the thing is we can't really comment on other browser vendors' product plans. But the key thing that we want to see you do is build something cool with these APIs and then go tell the other browser vendors how important this is to you. So go file a bug and give them an example of the use case that you have. Give them the specific business case and tell them what it is that's important to you. Don't just say, hey, I want this because Chrome wants this. Tell them I want this because it's important to me for these reasons. And then that really helps to encourage the other browser vendors to go and do these things. All right, well, that's all for the time we have today. But we'll be back soon with more episode of Ask Chrome.