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Wednesday, June 14, 2006

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Living in the Dual Mode

- Rob Bushway

Marc Orchant has picked up nicely on an article by David Berlind on the topic of working while connected to the net and the need to work where net access is not available.

I agree with Marc. It is really good to see a move to so many applications like Google spreadsheet, Microsoft Live,  and Writely available on the net, but the reality is that I still find myself in situations where I need to work, but I still don’t have access to the net.

Perfect example: I was giving a demo yesterday to a group and the restaurants wi-fi was going in and out. So I plugged in my verizon evdo / cdma card. I didn’t have evdo coverage there, and the cdma coverage was a bit worse than dial-up. I got the job done and it was only a presentation, but had my files resided on the net, I would have been in big trouble. Fortunately, I only needed the net for a portion of what I was doing and had my local files available.

These are problems that can get worked out over time, but I just don’t see a time coming really soon where we will be giving up our tablet pcs and totally relying on the net for access to our files.

Where the work really needs to take place is in the syncronization of my online and offline files. Dual modality is here to stay for quite a while – figuing out how to make that as transparent of an experience as possible is the key.

 



6/14/2006 10:50 AM MST  

Living in the Dual Mode     Comments [3]  |  Digg This |  del.icio.us |  Citations 
Wednesday, June 14, 2006 1:39:23 PM (Mountain Daylight Time, UTC-06:00)
See I don't get it. I don't see any valid reason for moving applications like that (especially Office type application) to the web. People think it is the solution to all deployment problems but it's not. It comes with so many limitations that it's not worth it. The solution is better deployment technologies for deploying smart clients. Why try to cram the functionality of a spreadsheet into a medium that was not designed for it.
Wednesday, June 14, 2006 8:12:02 PM (Mountain Daylight Time, UTC-06:00)
I sense we might be looking at this from an overly mobile perspective. Mobile users can't rely on Web-based apps because mobile connectivity is still unreliable.

However, many offices locked into hard networks rely on network-based apps, such as database interfaces, as part of their normal operations. Open your browser and log into Oracle. That happens in a lot of offices.

In these situations, it makes a lot of sense to put more apps on the network. Shifts more work to the servers, but it's easier for IT to manage and certainly a lot easier to upgrade (well, in principle). Upgrade an app on a hundred different user machines OR upgrade one server-based app and the handful of mobile users (whom you can force to come to you)? Which will the IT department favor? Today's free web-based apps are tomorrow's licensed business network apps.
Wednesday, June 14, 2006 9:09:24 PM (Mountain Daylight Time, UTC-06:00)
They tried this before with mainframes. Eventually developers become too frustrated with the limitations (then: terminal emulators, now: browsers) and switch back to clients. This isn't the second time they've tried either. It's actually the third.

Writing client applications slashes the amount of time it takes to get meaningful work done to like 1/3 over trying to achieve the same on the web. The crap people are doing in order to make the web look and feel more like desktop apps is astounding. Come on, OO frameworks for JavaScript? Flash apps are nothing more than client applications deployed over http and hosted in a browser window.

I have alot of faith in simplified deployment models like ClickOnce. I think the pendulum will be swinging back in favor of desktop applications over the next 2-3 years.
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