UPDATE:
To be complete, now that Flutter is being implemented on more platforms, like the mentioned web platform and the upcoming desktop support my current answer is probably no longer adequate.
The title property of the MaterialApp class is still used as originally described:
A one-line description used by the device to identify the app for the user.
On Android the 'title' property appears above the task manager's app snapshots which are displayed when the user presses the "recent apps" button or trigger the same functionality using a gesture.
On iOS this value has no effect.
'CFBundleDisplayName' from the app's 'Info.plist' is referred to instead whenever present and 'CFBundleName' otherwise. This is still the case.
You can open the iOS module in Xcode to change the value in Info.plist to change what is displayed on iOS.
This is also true when using the CupertinoApp class on iOS.
In other contexts, the title property is meant to be used by the
"OS task switcher". so what that means in practice as Flutter gets implemented on more platforms remains to see.
But as mentioned, the value is passed to a browser-tab's title when used with Flutter for the web, and to the window title when used on the (as of this date) experimental macOS and Linux desktop platforms and as the app title when using the OS app switchers like ⌘ + Tab on macOS.