Dan, et al:

Some people may well want to continue to pay premium prices for
software so that they can keep their data on their local drives, but:
(a) those people will eventually have to give way to the market
forces if for no other reason than that all the software publishers
head over there;

They won't be forced if some vendors continue to make desk-top apps available, and those vendors will have a greater share of of this "smaller (?)" market if major vendors abandon it.

and (b) there really needn't be a connection between
where the software is and where the data is unless the user wants
such a connection.

And, at least last time I checked, many do:

Shortly before I left the FlexWare world, I was called in on a project to link FlexWare with an eCommerce package. The project was was scoped out between the two software vendors and moi, then the client who requested the link was brought into the loop. Once the client realized that his company's customer, product, price, and sales data would reside on an off-site computer owned and run by another company, he pullled the plug.

This does not mean a company couldn't find some advantages in browser-driven INTRAnet apps. But a lot of smaller companies (a) don't need a network that spans more than one physical location, and (b) lack the resources to build & maintain one.

Also, how do the economics work if each user wants a different version if the app? For a decade and a half I made my living tweaking FlexWare accounting modules to work the way a single company wanted it to work. I never ceased to be amazed at how much even small companies are willing to invest to have a system that works the way they do business instead of being forced to change their business or accounting procedures to meet the requirements of packaged software. And after the economics, what are the logistics of maintaing multiple versions of the same browser-driven app for different users?

Finally, Andre's point about all the other ways data must be created and maintained before & after a web commerce transaction is well taken.

Rob Cozens CCW
Serendipity Software Company

"And I, which was two fooles, do so grow three;
 Who are a little wise, the best fooles bee."

from "The Triple Foole" by John Donne (1572-1631)
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