• Home
  • Next Gen Gadgets for ME
  • Middle Eastern Startup Ecosystem
  • FutureTech in ME
  • Reports
  • Home
  • Next Gen Gadgets for ME
  • Middle Eastern Startup Ecosystem
  • FutureTech in ME
  • Reports
Home Social Media

WhatsApp Drops Native Windows App in Favour of Web-Based Version

July 22, 2025
in Social Media
Reading Time: 4 mins read
WhatsApp Drops Native Windows App in Favour of Web-Based Version
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Meta quietly ditched WhatsApp’s fast native Windows app and replaced it with a basic web wrapper. The change affects millions of desktop users who now face slower performance and higher memory usage.

The messaging giant rolled out this switch in the latest beta version. Users download what looks like a regular desktop app but actually get the web version of WhatsApp wrapped in Microsoft’s Edge WebView2 technology.

Performance Takes a Hit

Testing shows the new web-based app uses 30% more RAM than the native version. The difference becomes obvious during daily use – messages load slower, notifications feel delayed, and the interface responds less smoothly.

WhatsApp’s own support documentation contradicts this move. The company previously stated that native apps “provide increased performance and reliability” compared to web versions. Meta specifically designed the Windows app to be “optimized for your computer’s operating system” and promised “increased reliability and speed.”

The old native app ran as a single, lightweight process using Windows’ built-in interface tools. The new web wrapper spawns multiple helper processes for graphics, networking, and storage – just like running Chrome browser tabs.

From Native Excellence to Web Mediocrity

WhatsApp’s Windows app stood out as one of the few truly native Universal Windows Platform (UWP) apps. Microsoft executives, including former hardware chief Panos Panay, praised it as an example of proper Windows development.

The native app maintained feature parity with WhatsApp’s mobile versions. New features often arrived on Windows simultaneously with Android and iOS releases – sometimes even earlier. This rapid development cycle impressed users who typically wait longer for desktop updates.

Now Meta forces Windows users back to the same web interface available at web.whatsapp.com. The company simply wrapped this web page in a desktop container rather than building proper Windows integration.

Why Meta Made This Change

Meta chose simplicity over performance. Maintaining one web codebase across all platforms costs less than supporting separate native apps for Windows, Mac, and Linux.

The web version of WhatsApp has always received updates faster than desktop apps. Meta’s developers focus primarily on the web platform, then port features to mobile and desktop later. This web-first approach means the wrapper version will likely get new features sooner.

However, this development speed comes at the cost of system integration. The web wrapper cannot access Windows features as deeply as native apps. Notifications work differently, keyboard shortcuts disappear, and the interface looks foreign compared to other Windows applications.

What Users Lose in the Switch

Desktop WhatsApp users face several downgrades:

  • Higher Resource Usage: The web wrapper consumes significantly more memory and processing power than the native app.
  • Slower Performance: Message loading, file transfers, and interface responsiveness all suffer compared to the native version.
  • Poor Windows Integration: The app no longer follows Windows design principles or integrates properly with system features.
  • Missing Keyboard Shortcuts: Common Windows shortcuts that worked in the native app no longer function.
  • Generic Interface: The web wrapper looks identical across all platforms instead of adapting to Windows visual style.

Microsoft’s WebView2 Powers the Change

Meta built the new WhatsApp using Microsoft’s Edge WebView2 framework. This technology lets developers package web applications as desktop programs without building native interfaces.

WebView2 essentially runs a hidden Chrome browser that displays the web version of WhatsApp. This explains why Task Manager now shows multiple WhatsApp processes instead of the single process from the native app.

Many companies use WebView2 to avoid the cost and complexity of native app development. However, this approach typically results in slower, more resource-heavy applications that feel less integrated with the operating system.

Current Status and User Impact

The web wrapper currently appears only in WhatsApp’s beta program. Meta has not announced when all Windows users will receive the change, but the company typically rolls out beta features within weeks or months.

WhatsApp has not explained its decision publicly. The company also has not indicated whether the macOS app will receive similar treatment, though Mac development differs significantly from Windows due to shared code with iPhone and iPad versions.

Windows users who prefer the native app can continue using it until Meta forces the web wrapper update. However, staying on the old version means missing new features and security updates.

The change represents a broader trend of companies abandoning native Windows development for web-based solutions. While this approach reduces development costs, it often degrades user experience on desktop platforms.

Meta’s decision particularly stings because WhatsApp had built one of the best native Windows apps available. The company proved that proper desktop development was possible and profitable, then chose to abandon that investment for easier maintenance.

Tags: desktop messaging performanceEdge WebView2messaging app updatesMeta web wrapperUWP native appWhatsApp Windows appWindows app development
Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement
ADVERTISEMENT
Previous Post

Perplexity Adds Task Automation to Comet Browser Through New Shortcuts Feature

Next Post

OpenAI ChatGPT Agent Takes Control: New AI Assistant Handles Complex Tasks Independently

Recommended For You

UAE’s MoHRE Sets New Digital Benchmark with 18 Million Transactions in 6 Months
Middle East Innovation Frontier

UAE’s MoHRE Sets New Digital Benchmark with 18 Million Transactions in 6 Months

by Faith Amonimo
August 19, 2025
0

The UAE's Ministry of Human Resources and Emiratisation (MoHRE) completed over 18 million smart transactions during the first half of 2025. This achievement puts the ministry on track to double...

Read moreDetails
UAE Introduces Mandatory Advertiser Permits for Content Creators — Free for First Three Years

UAE Introduces Mandatory Advertiser Permits for Content Creators — Free for First Three Years

July 31, 2025
𝕏 Tops France News App Charts, But It’s a Category Play, Not a Content Win

𝕏 Tops France News App Charts, But It’s a Category Play, Not a Content Win

July 22, 2025
X Will Now Change Ad Pricing Based on Screen Size

X Will Now Change Ad Pricing Based on Screen Size

July 1, 2025
logo of facebook

Facebook Is Finally Killing Passwords -Here’s Why That’s a Big Deal

June 19, 2025
Next Post
OpenAI ChatGPT Agent Takes Control: New AI Assistant Handles Complex Tasks Independently

OpenAI ChatGPT Agent Takes Control: New AI Assistant Handles Complex Tasks Independently

𝕏 Tops France News App Charts, But It’s a Category Play, Not a Content Win

𝕏 Tops France News App Charts, But It’s a Category Play, Not a Content Win

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Popular Stories

  • Azad Abdullahi Launches Snoozify: A Free Chrome Extension That Lets You Snooze Tabs and Bring Them Back Later

    Azad Abdullahi Launches Snoozify: A Free Chrome Extension That Lets You Snooze Tabs and Bring Them Back Later

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Replit Raises $250M Series C at $3B Valuation and Launches Agent 3

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • UAE PropTech Leader PRYPCO Raises Pre-Series A Funding from General Catalyst

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • How She Works: The Cultural Competence Playbook of Jennifer Mwangi, NHS Transformation Leader and Doctoral Researcher at the University of Bath

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • S60 & Fintech Saudi Unveil New Accelerator for Fintech Startups

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Where the Middle East Tech Revolution Begins – Covering tech innovations, startups, and developments across the Middle East..​

Facebook X-twitter Instagram Linkedin

Get In Touch

United Arab Emirates (Dubai)

Email: Info@techsoma.net

Quick Links

Advertise on Techsoma

Publish your Articles

T & C

Privacy Policy

© 2025 — Techsoma Middle East. All Rights Reserved

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result

© 2025 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.
Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?