Everywhere You Want To Be

6 Dec 2007 in General by Garrick

From a development standpoint, there’s huge benefit to developing applications in for HTML - if simply because the barrier to entry is much lower than other development platforms.

In addition, there’s no vendor behind HTML. In front of - yes. Behind - No. This means a website written a decade ago still loads in today’s browsers on today’s hardware. The same isn’t true of stack of desktop apps from the same time period.

From a maintenance standpoint - a developer today could crack open yesterday’s HTML page and figure out what’s going on. Or more importantly - vice versa.

Until fairly recently, browsers were limited to general use computer (desktops, laptops, handhelds). Now, TiVo, XBox, Playstation, any device with any kind of network connection has a browser.

Each one of those devices is a different context, each still has it’s own unique capabilities. Why wouldn’t I want a readable - if not writable - calendar, mail client, etc on each of them?

The differences between Internet Explorer, Firefox, and Safari are irrelevant once we start talking about having a productive, cohesive experience across all the devices I touch during the day.

Yes, this my sound like a 180° from my earlier positions. But it’s more of a clarification.

HTML as a presentation layer holds the promise of easy, write once, run everywhere development. Desktop applications with HTML at their core are very compelling from a number of angles (maintenance, development) but they’re still Desktop apps. That means they’re expected to be keyboard controllable, accessible offline, and dare I say - integrate with other Desktop applications in addition to the cloud.


Comment | Trackback URL Short Link:

Add a Comment


XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Related Entries




Creative Commons License
About Sitemap XHTML Sitemap XML
Wordpress theme is a heavily hacked version of "Modicus Remix" by Art Culture. Original by Upstart Blogger