Jim Dettman
jimdettman at verizon.net
Tue Sep 3 07:12:41 CDT 2013
It's not that they cannot, it's they don't want to. Microsoft has jumped ship in regards to the desktop and are looking to leapfrog everyone by a few years. Their entire corporate strategy and focus is aimed at the web and getting Office users onto a subscription model because the software development cycle as we know it is no longer sustainable. They don't want anyone on the desktop any more with applications. The risk is that they may have jumped too far too quickly. Not everyone has broadband for example and their effort may fail for that reason alone. The other biggie is security; not everyone is comfortable with everything being in the cloud and having someone else in control of your data. The exposure of the government monitoring programs could not have come at a worst time for them, as it proves beyond a doubt how data is no longer under your control once off premise. I think that more then anything is going to give people pause about the use of cloud technologies. But even without that, I think they under estimated the reluctance of business moving into the cloud. Unfortunately, I believe it's too late for Access. I really do think their turning it into nothing more then a front end / power user tool that's web based. Oh the desktop side will still be around for a while, but I think it will stand as is and not change from this point forward. It's pretty obvious that the last three releases were focused on nothing but the web. It also seems pretty obvious that they are focused on using macro's with web apps and will not bring anything more powerful on board for coding. They are also suggesting doing reporting via Excel and that's the last functional piece they need to round out web apps. There maybe a small glimmer of hope though; they woke up a bit with Windows 8 and have back tracked. Maybe they'll do the same for the desktop side again and make some improvements, or at least provide some more power under the hood with web apps in order to get existing DB's onto the web, but that seems like a long shot at this point. Web App's are just too much of a departure from the current desktop DB's. And so many developers have already left the product. By the time we would see improvements, there may not be many of us left to use them :( Jim. -----Original Message----- From: accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com [mailto:accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com] On Behalf Of Mark Simms Sent: Monday, September 02, 2013 10:03 PM To: 'Access Developers discussion and problem solving' Subject: Re: [AccessD] Alpha Anywhere Thanks Arthur - it boggles the mind that neither MSFT nor Adobe with their near infinite resources.... could come-up with a competitive offering ? -- AccessD mailing list AccessD at databaseadvisors.com http://databaseadvisors.com/mailman/listinfo/accessd Website: http://www.databaseadvisors.com