So then we’re back to why business apps take so very long to build nowadays, and why no-one can seem to decide which tools to use. Either way, as an industry, our productivity when building apps is poor.
Regards, Greg Dr Greg Low 1300SQLSQL (1300 775 775) office | +61 419201410 mobile│ +61 3 8676 4913 fax SQL Down Under | Web: www.sqldownunder.com |http://greglow.me *From:* ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com [mailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com] *On Behalf Of *Tony Wright *Sent:* Tuesday, 21 November 2017 3:44 PM *To:* ozDotNet <ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com> *Subject:* Re: Creating a browser-based product Yep, these days you abstract away the differences with polyfills. You build for different screen sizes using a css framework such as bootstrap. On 21 Nov 2017 3:27 PM, "David Connors" <da...@connors.com> wrote: On Tue, 21 Nov 2017 at 14:17 Greg Low <g...@greglow.com> wrote: Completely agree (that’s why I said Apples and Oranges) but you are describing a deployment issue no, not an app-development issue? The question is why the tools don’t abstract enough away to allow for a high degree of developer productivity. As an example, I can’t believe how much time is wasted trying to get things to look the same on different browsers. That’s just dead time that surely could be abstracted away. That is much less of an issue these days - esp if you just ignore the existence of IE. David. -- David Connors da...@connors.com | @davidconnors | https://t.me/davidconnors | LinkedIn | +61 417 189 363