Web Application VS Windows Application
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@Dashrender said in Web Application VS Windows Application:
Scott do you hear about companies porting apps like Photoshop or Final Cut over to Web Apps?
I haven't yet, but that's the direction Adobe started with their "Adobe Cloud". Great, I get to pay twice as much to use you're software now. I'll stick with GIMP and Blender for now, unless someone gives me a valid reason they need one of the Adobe apps for 1-2 months.
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@travisdh1 said in Web Application VS Windows Application:
@Dashrender said in Web Application VS Windows Application:
Scott do you hear about companies porting apps like Photoshop or Final Cut over to Web Apps?
I haven't yet, but that's the direction Adobe started with their "Adobe Cloud". Great, I get to pay twice as much to use you're software now. I'll stick with GIMP and Blender for now, unless someone gives me a valid reason they need one of the Adobe apps for 1-2 months.
100% agree.
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@travisdh1 said in Web Application VS Windows Application:
@Dashrender said in Web Application VS Windows Application:
Scott do you hear about companies porting apps like Photoshop or Final Cut over to Web Apps?
I haven't yet, but that's the direction Adobe started with their "Adobe Cloud". Great, I get to pay twice as much to use you're software now. I'll stick with GIMP and Blender for now, unless someone gives me a valid reason they need one of the Adobe apps for 1-2 months.
Are you sure? What makes you think that the Adobe Cloud means that the apps are Web Apps and not just a subscription service with cloud components?
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@travisdh1 said in Web Application VS Windows Application:
@Dashrender said in Web Application VS Windows Application:
Scott do you hear about companies porting apps like Photoshop or Final Cut over to Web Apps?
I haven't yet, but that's the direction Adobe started with their "Adobe Cloud". Great, I get to pay twice as much to use you're software now. I'll stick with GIMP and Blender for now, unless someone gives me a valid reason they need one of the Adobe apps for 1-2 months.
Adobe Cloud is still 100% native apps. Web apps is not related to subscription pricing.
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@Dashrender said in Web Application VS Windows Application:
@travisdh1 said in Web Application VS Windows Application:
@Dashrender said in Web Application VS Windows Application:
Scott do you hear about companies porting apps like Photoshop or Final Cut over to Web Apps?
I haven't yet, but that's the direction Adobe started with their "Adobe Cloud". Great, I get to pay twice as much to use you're software now. I'll stick with GIMP and Blender for now, unless someone gives me a valid reason they need one of the Adobe apps for 1-2 months.
Are you sure? What makes you think that the Adobe Cloud means that the apps are Web Apps and not just a subscription service with cloud components?
I don't, think that Adobe Cloud means the apps are magically Web Apps instead of native. Heck, the Adobe Cloud would be a LOT more valuable if they were web apps!
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@travisdh1 said in Web Application VS Windows Application:
@Dashrender said in Web Application VS Windows Application:
@travisdh1 said in Web Application VS Windows Application:
@Dashrender said in Web Application VS Windows Application:
Scott do you hear about companies porting apps like Photoshop or Final Cut over to Web Apps?
I haven't yet, but that's the direction Adobe started with their "Adobe Cloud". Great, I get to pay twice as much to use you're software now. I'll stick with GIMP and Blender for now, unless someone gives me a valid reason they need one of the Adobe apps for 1-2 months.
Are you sure? What makes you think that the Adobe Cloud means that the apps are Web Apps and not just a subscription service with cloud components?
I don't, think that Adobe Cloud means the apps are magically Web Apps instead of native. Heck, the Adobe Cloud would be a LOT more valuable if they were web apps!
Not to nit-pick, then how does Adobe's Adobe Cloud start them in that direction?
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@Dashrender said in Web Application VS Windows Application:
@travisdh1 said in Web Application VS Windows Application:
@Dashrender said in Web Application VS Windows Application:
@travisdh1 said in Web Application VS Windows Application:
@Dashrender said in Web Application VS Windows Application:
Scott do you hear about companies porting apps like Photoshop or Final Cut over to Web Apps?
I haven't yet, but that's the direction Adobe started with their "Adobe Cloud". Great, I get to pay twice as much to use you're software now. I'll stick with GIMP and Blender for now, unless someone gives me a valid reason they need one of the Adobe apps for 1-2 months.
Are you sure? What makes you think that the Adobe Cloud means that the apps are Web Apps and not just a subscription service with cloud components?
I don't, think that Adobe Cloud means the apps are magically Web Apps instead of native. Heck, the Adobe Cloud would be a LOT more valuable if they were web apps!
Not to nit-pick, then how does Adobe's Adobe Cloud start them in that direction?
Well, I guess it doesn't necessarily mean that, but just as a (former) Adobe customer, having to download that bloated mess of stuff is a pain at best. With our internet connections around here you might as well forget about it at one location, and the other would at least download it over a weekend.
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@travisdh1 said in Web Application VS Windows Application:
@Dashrender said in Web Application VS Windows Application:
@travisdh1 said in Web Application VS Windows Application:
@Dashrender said in Web Application VS Windows Application:
@travisdh1 said in Web Application VS Windows Application:
@Dashrender said in Web Application VS Windows Application:
Scott do you hear about companies porting apps like Photoshop or Final Cut over to Web Apps?
I haven't yet, but that's the direction Adobe started with their "Adobe Cloud". Great, I get to pay twice as much to use you're software now. I'll stick with GIMP and Blender for now, unless someone gives me a valid reason they need one of the Adobe apps for 1-2 months.
Are you sure? What makes you think that the Adobe Cloud means that the apps are Web Apps and not just a subscription service with cloud components?
I don't, think that Adobe Cloud means the apps are magically Web Apps instead of native. Heck, the Adobe Cloud would be a LOT more valuable if they were web apps!
Not to nit-pick, then how does Adobe's Adobe Cloud start them in that direction?
Well, I guess it doesn't necessarily mean that, but just as a (former) Adobe customer, having to download that bloated mess of stuff is a pain at best. With our internet connections around here you might as well forget about it at one location, and the other would at least download it over a weekend.
Web applications does not imply that anything is downloaded, though.
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Right, the whole point of this thread is basically apps that platform independent. Apps that will run in an HTML5 browser
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@Dashrender said in Web Application VS Windows Application:
Right, the whole point of this thread is basically apps that platform independent. Apps that will run in an HTML5 browser
At least as their interface. The entire app doesn't have to be there.
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@dashrender said in Web Application VS Windows Application:
Assuming that Office is written for a web browser, then what keeps it from just working on Linux?
Policy. If MS doesn't want to release it for Linux, you don't get it. What it is written in has never been a factor. C# and C++ both run on Linux, and before it was web based, it wasn't available on Linux.
Same with Spiceworks. It's been written in Ruby since day one, and Ruby is native to Linux. But SW never was willing to release on Linux, regardless of the fact that they wrote and tested on Linux, then packaged only for Windows afterwards.
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@dashrender said in Web Application VS Windows Application:
Right, the whole point of this thread is basically apps that platform independent. Apps that will run in an HTML5 browser
Sort of, you have always had access to platform independence with non-web tech. It only feels this way if you are steeped in Windows-only culture which is relatively unique in that nearly all Windows software was traditionally "Windows only" by design. Most platforms never had that culture.
If you use Qt for example, you can use TCL, Python, Ruby and any number of languages to make platform independent, non-web apps and always have. Same with Java, obviously, although that sucked for different reasons. C#, C, C++ all let you make cross platform desktop apps.
Web apps can be non-platform independent just like desktop ones. Web app is an architecture and is far, far more than just the interface. Thinking of web app design as just using HTML5 on top will lead you down all kinds of mistaken paths. HTML5 interface might "work on any OS", but that doesn't mean that the service producing it will. You could write that service in something that only runs on Windows or Linux, and only shows its interface locally, and make a web app that is completely platform dependent, if you wanted. That would be highly dumb, but it's just as doable as it ever was.
It just doesn't seem like it is because of culture. People writing desktop apps generally live in a "my way or the highway, use my preferred OS" world, and people building web apps tend to be more modern and live in a "make better software in a modern way" culture. This trend is what gives you the impression of one doing one thing and one doing another, rather than the technology under the hood.
Web app architecture simply gives us a modern architected system with a universal interface standard. It gives us the ability to leverage things like load balancers, proxies, caches and such that are standard, and deploy standard interfaces and choose, by simply not breaking the defaults, to have local and/or remote interfaces over a network.
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When it comes to web vs legacy applications, especially with modern JS libraries, webassembly, etc aside from a few niche cases which you have to basically struggle to defend, asking whether or not to start with web or ancient technology is like saying:
"Look, I know that cars are fast and everything, but they have a lot of up keep and there's so much going on with them and they're scary, so wouldn't you say that a horse and buggy are still a viable solution to travel with because I'm confused and/or intimidated by cars."
Or to put it more obvious: "Yes, web is easy to update, easy to secure, easy to keep it from being pirated, but I'd much rather have an application anyone can easily reverse engineer, lock out my updates, have to worry about a billion platforms or one single one where I still have to struggle with antiviruses, permissions, to the point where I act like Eaglesoft and just demand local admin rights for all users no matter what... sounds like web is great but, I heard serious applications are written with mud bricks, whoops, I mean old approaches because I don't know about jQuery and handling multiple browsers sounds impossible!"
Or in the case of the OP: web is about design and old applications are about whatever... let me hip you to something, all good web designers are terrible, terrible programmers. This is why these are typically two jobs. Yes, plenty of them defend how awesome they are at coding, how they care about standards, etc but if they actually let you see their code you'll find that either it's crappy code or a crappy design. That goes for both web and old style applications, it doesn't matter. Straight forward vs pretty.
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Wow old thread. I read it all though. Strange this guy never came back when it was obvious he was having so much trouble.
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@jmoore said in Web Application VS Windows Application:
Wow old thread. I read it all though. Strange this guy never came back when it was obvious he was having so much trouble.
Maybe he changed his name. he was super active in 2016, then vanished.
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@scottalanmiller Certainly could be.
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@jmoore said in Web Application VS Windows Application:
@scottalanmiller Certainly could be.
He has over 1,200 posts, one of our top posters over the years.