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Time Ripe to Embrace Web Applications

By Qudsia Jamaal on June 14, 2010



People are increasingly gravitating toward the web browser to accomplish most of their daily tasks. A typical computer user uses internet connection for various reasons. He may check his/her mail online, chat with friends on Facebook, or follow someone on Twitter, orders a lot of things from cyber store and maybe even kill some time watching videos on You Tube before reading their favorite news site or checking up on a bank statement.

The increasing use of web application has made it possible for employees of various corporations to access their pay roll or document management system directly from their browser.

Despite the fact that web applications are not as fast as Desktop applications, its usage among computer users has consistently been on the rise. The reason is to simple and difference obvious. Users no longer have to be tied to a single computer with all their software installed on it, and they no longer have to carry around data in memory sticks.

Google Docs for example allows users to do all their document editing or spreadsheet work online and access it from everywhere. Google recently even featured the infamous Pac Man game on its homepage which resulted in millions of hours of game play across the globe.

But there are far more profound factors influencing this paradigm shift. Desktop applications are hard to update as users are required to download new versions or updates each time.

On the other hand a user may refresh GMail only to find that the layout has improved from what it was 10 seconds ago.

Regardless of the change which could be extremely minor in nature and effortless as the color of an icon. Updates for desktop applications, by contrast must wait until a significant number of small changes have accumulated.

They are then released together as part of a bigger software release. This is done because it is not feasible to release a new update each time an icon changes.

Web applications are also centrally managed which is why a lot of enterprise applications like payroll and customer management are now moving to the browser. SalesForce.com is an example of a just such a web-based application providing customer management and accounting software to the millions of small and medium businesses through a website. What is most interesting though is that all potential customers of SalesForce.com are only a click away.

Web applications may reach to the millions in a split second due to its massive reach. and hence they are so designed to cater for the needs of millions. This is great for users as well because the software costs end up being a lot lower.  Software problems are almost non-existent in Web applications and easier to fix, if there are any because there are only a handful of different browsers which work the same on computers and mobile phones.

Web applications promise to get even better with the next generation of browsers already here. The Google Chrome browser for example allows users to drag-and-drop attachments into GMail or read their mail through the browser even if disconnected from the Internet tasks previously exclusive to Desktop applications.