Personally I see interesting possibilities with one of these servers sitting
inside my network. Perhaps very close to my source repository, or code
review/wiki software  and integrated with my branches.

Vineet
-- 
Founder, Architexa - www.architexa.com
Understand & Document Code In Seconds



On Mon, Mar 28, 2011 at 8:53 AM, Moandji Ezana <[email protected]> wrote:

> A lot are being announced, at the moment:
>
> Eclipse's Orion and OrionHub
> eXo's Cloud IDE <http://www.infoq.com/news/2011/03/cloud-ide-java-exo>
> Cloud9 IDE <http://cloud9ide.com/>
>
> From the user's side, not being able to work at all if the IDE provider
> service goes down seems like a big drawback. The only advantage seems to be
> maybe not having to set up a local environment.
>
> From the provider's side, I wonder if this is even a viable business.
> Considering that paid Java IDEs are a pretty niche business, can a provider
> with ongoing costs make any money at it?
>
> Would you use a cloud-based IDE?
>
> Moandji
>
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