Colin:

go to "http://www.hinduismtoday.com/digital/

subscribe (its free) and download the Digital Edition of Hinduism Today.

The site is a very retro 1997 design (we are working on that... will be launching a new site later this year) but Hinduism Today Digital Edition (HTDE) "rocks" for those who

a) are willing to install an executable
b) have the bandwidth

Of course this app is not content, in and of itself, it's a content delivery system, so if your Flash crowd are purely "creative" and not interested in the "big picture" then, like Mark says, they may just "shrug"

The whole thing is Revolution from end to end-- (well almost, the back end subscription dBase is PostGreSQL--but CGI that handle registration, delivery, the executable that is installed etc. is all Revolution.

The "must run in a browser" sentiment is softening. In fact, the conventional wisdom now is: if you *can* get users to download an executable, its *way* better that they have a "sticky" application on the client machine that "locks in" your users in a way that a regular web site can never do...there's a growing segment of web users who are pretty sick of the info glut and are happy to be able to go off line and use your sticky app that is focus on a single content theme instead of staring at a 4 column web page with 150 links squeezed onto a single screen. So, both are important elements in an enterprise delivery system.

At any rate... I really don't think that building the same HTDE app in Flash would even be remotely possible in any reasonable time frame. The beauty of it is: You are working in a single language across the entire framework (minus a few shell calls to do the PostGreSQL queries... i.e. you do need to know a bit of SQL talk..)

Andre recently ramped up the Media Viewer stack in HTDE... the UI that is generate by the executable is installed on the client machine, but when you click on "View Multi-media" you get a stack downloaded over the net, and it then in turn downloads another small data base stack with all the meta data for the media viewer. I believe others are doing similar things and are in fact way ahead of us... but, it works... Again, this is a delivery framework... not content as such... so its a "different animal" ... but shows possibilities.


b) Colin Holgate wrote:
At 4:18 PM +0200 4/10/08, Björnke von Gierke wrote:
I still think you should specify your demand a bit more, as just asking for every rev application on the planet is not a good way to get information about those that you actually want.

I think I have enough leads now! It is a bit abstract a request, I know, but I want to show things that are both not a stereotypical HyperCard like stack, and not something that a Flash person would say "oh I could do that in about 10 minutes in Flash". The more like a standard OSX app they look the better, because even if you could do something on those lines in Flash, it would no doubt have that Flash-like feel to it, enough to not feel like a real application.

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