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by fnordprefect 1900 days ago
Sorry, but I think this is a poorly thought-out argument.

Main reasoning:

  All in all, though, the desktop database industry has entirely collapsed since the early '00s. Desktop databases are typically viewed today as legacy artifacts, a sign of poor engineering and extensive technical debt. Far from democratizing, they are seen as constraining.

  What changed?

  I posit that the decline of desktop databases reflects a larger shift in the software industry: broadly speaking, an increase in profit motive, and a decrease in ambition.

  ...

  The software industry, I contend, has fallen from grace. It is hard to place when this change occurred, because it happened slowly and by degrees, but it seems to me like sometime during the late '90s to early '00s the software industry fundamentally gave up. Interest in solving problems was abandoned and replaced by a drive to engage users, a vague term that is nearly always interpreted in a way that raises fundamental ethical concerns. Computing is no longer a lofty field engaged in the salvation of mankind; it is a field of mechanical labor engaged in the conversion of people into money.

  In short, capitalism ruins computing once again.
A far more likely reason, and one which I believe is the true cause, is that there is relatively little demand for desktop databases:

* there is a non-trivial degree of tech knowledge needed to run and maintain them

* they are tied to the desktop, and not ubiquitously accessible

In short, people want to focus on the task (running their household; keep track of collections; running their small business; logging inventory; etc) and not the technical means of accomplishing that task

This is all about a collapse in demand, and a shift to an alternative that better suits the needs and desires of the end-users.

It has nothing to do with "capitalism" ruining things. (Side note - the author has not defined capitalism, and I don't think it actually means what he/she thinks it does.)

Edited to add: there are still many desktop database programs offered to users. If there were still a huge demand for them, they would outcompete the supposedly evil industry products that so upset the author.