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Paige works in your phone’s browser, but it’s much better installed to your home screen: it opens like a real app, and it can notify you when a customer needs a person.

Install it

Open Paige in Chrome and you’ll get a prompt: Install Paige — Add Paige to your home screen for the full app experience. Tap Install.Missed it or dismissed it? Open the drawer (☰) and look for Install to home screen, or use Chrome’s menu → Install app.

Getting around

Everything lives behind the menu in the top-left: Build, Conversations, Flows, Broadcasts, Tools, Settings, and Help. One screen at a time, rather than the three columns you get on a desktop. The useful trick is swiping. Most tabs are a pair, and you swipe left and right between them: So on Build you describe a change, then swipe right to try it — which is most of what building a bot actually is.
Build is the Code tab renamed. On a phone the front door is the chat, not the code.

What doesn’t work on a phone

You can’t edit code on mobile. You can view your bot’s file structure from the Files button in the Build chat, but tapping a file only shows you its path — there’s no editor. Everything the AI writes is fine; it’s hand-editing that’s desktop-only.
Also worth knowing: the live preview when creating a message template is hidden on phones, so you’re composing without seeing it rendered. Templates are worth doing at a desk.

Notifications

Settings → Notifications has a single switch: Push notifications. Turning it on asks your browser’s permission — say yes. Paige notifies you about three things:
Titled with the contact’s name, showing their message. You get this when a conversation is in handover — you’ve taken over and they’ve replied — or when someone starts a new conversation after 24 hours of silence.You won’t get pinged for every message your bot handles by itself. That’s the point: it’s telling you when your bot isn’t handling it.Everyone with access to Conversations on the project gets these.
Build succeeded or Build failed, naming the project. Only the person who clicked Deploy gets this.
Campaign sending when it starts, Campaign sent when it finishes, and Campaign needs attention if it was cancelled because Meta didn’t approve its template in time. Only the person who created it gets these.

Per device, but every device

The switch controls this device only — turning it on on your phone doesn’t turn it on on your laptop. But once a device is subscribed it gets everything. So with your phone and laptop both on, every notification arrives on both.
You won’t get a notification while you’re looking at Paige. If a Paige window is open and focused, the notification is suppressed — you’d see the message arrive on screen anyway. They show up when Paige is in the background, on another tab, or closed. If you’re testing notifications and nothing appears, switch away from Paige first.
If you’ve blocked notifications for Paige, the switch is disabled and can’t be re-enabled from inside Paige — you’ll need to allow them again in your browser or phone settings, then reload.

Offline

Paige needs a connection — it’s a live view of a bot running on a server. Lose signal and you’ll get a You’re offline screen with a Try again button.