A better question might be as to why apps like MS Word, Excel, Power BI
Desktop, etc. even still exist. With their substantial resources, can’t
Microsoft build better web-based versions of them? Why do users still want
the thick client versions of those?





*From:* Greg Low [mailto:g...@greglow.com]
*Sent:* Tuesday, 21 November 2017 7:26 PM
*To:* ozDotNet <ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com>
*Subject:* Re: Creating a browser-based product



Again all of that is largely about deployment Ken. Yes thick client apps
were a pain in the neck to test and deploy. But surely we could have
improved the dev experience even further, while building something trivial
to deploy. Web apps were largely driven by IT admin folk who were sick of
trying to test and deploy apps. But for example, if you sat a user in front
of say Outlook thick client and the Outlook web apps, it’d be a rare person
who’d choose the web version for the UI. And how many business apps are
built better than Outlook OWA? It’s not great but it’s better than the web
based business apps in most companies.



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



On Tue, Nov 21, 2017 at 7:11 PM +1100, "Ken Schaefer" <k...@adopenstatic.com>
wrote:

We used to have everything as thick-client apps. And then every time we had
to upgrade an OS, we have to regression test, and sociability test 1000+
apps. That’s a huge waste of time.

Then there’s the deployment issues of pushing thousands of apps out to
thousands/tens of thousands/hundreds of thousands of endpoints.



When you talk about building a LoB app – well, that works when you have 1,
or 2 apps. It doesn’t scale.



Instead, we’re now using a browser as a virtual OS (with hardware,
networking etc. abstracted away to the real OS), with an application UI and
some logic delivered as text at run-time, and the non-GUI parts centralised.



And when we look at all the possible ways of building apps, and the choices
being made by both developers of apps, and buyers of apps, it seems the
market’s been pretty unequivocal about the preferred method.



Why it’s not much better/faster than before, is probably down to
immaturity. If you want an app that does something that we were able to do
20 years ago, then that’s trivial to implement. But what the market wants
is apps to do things that haven’t been done before.



*From:* ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com [mailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com
<ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com>] *On Behalf Of *Greg Low
*Sent:* Tuesday, 21 November 2017 5:51 PM
*To:* ozDotNet <ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com>
*Subject:* RE: Creating a browser-based product



But when a business just wants a line of business app, are these good
answers now? Do they care if it could be used by billions of people? The
odd one might care. Most won’t.



Won’t they be more concerned with taking 6 or 8 times longer, and costing
proportionately more?



Not every app is at the high-end. Most aren’t.



And now I watch daily nightmares around deploying web apps too.



What exactly have we done to ourselves?



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 *Craig van Nieuwkerk
*Sent:* Tuesday, 21 November 2017 4:46 PM
*To:* ozDotNet <ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com>
*Subject:* Re: Creating a browser-based product



I'm not sure this is much more of an issue now than it was. Back in the day
we had to decide between Delphi, VB, Powerbuilder, C++ among others when
building a Windows app. And once we decided that we had to work out which
third party libraries we wanted to use with them.



If I take an old 15 year old Delphi app I have it would take me the best
part of a week to get it compiling again now if I had to build the dev
machine from scratch.



On Tue, Nov 21, 2017 at 3:53 PM, Greg Low <g...@greglow.com> wrote:

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.

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