Pinterest is the latest tech company to introduce a “Lite” version of its mobile application to meet the needs of users in Africa and other emerging markets.
With Pinterest Lite, launched recently, users will benefit from a faster download and an app that takes up less storage space on their mobile device, the company says.
Pinterest previously offered a Pinterest Lite app on Google Play, but this app was pulled a year ago, according to data from App Annie.
The new Pinterest Lite app is actually Pinterest’s Progressive Web App (PWA) that’s been made available to Google Play users as a download.
This is a project that’s been underway for some time, according to a post last year on Pinterest’s Engineering blog. There, the company acknowledged that its mobile web experience had been “terrible” and in need of an update.
In July 2017, the picture-sharing platform formed a team to rewrite the mobile web app from scratch as a PWA. It said this would offer a better experience for people in low-bandwidth environments and on limited data plans.
The Pinterest Lite mobile app is available to Android users in Peru, Argentina, Colombia, Chile and Mexico, and clocks in at a tiny 1.4 MB.
The main app’s size varies by the device on Android but is significantly larger. On iOS, it’s 143.1 MB, for comparison’s sake.
“The goal is to bring Pinterest to everyone around the world so they can discover inspiration related to their interests wherever they might be,” a Pinterest spokesperson said.
Pinterest is now one of many top publishers who offer a “Lite” version of their flagship apps.
Google has a full suite of lightweight “Go”-branded apps, like Google Go, Gmail Go, Files Go, YouTube Go, Google Maps Go and Google Assistant Go.
There’s also Facebook Lite, Instagram Lite, Messenger Lite, Twitter Lite, Uber Lite, Spotify Lite, TikTok Lite, and Skype Lite, to name a few others.
Offering a Lite app is a baseline requirement these days for competing in emerging markets.