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by chrisringrose
4917 days ago
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The FPS demo is just that: a demo. It's not made by a game company. It's not made by iD. It's a demo made to run on as many desktops as possible, unlike anything by iD, which pushes graphics to the limit. Graphics are your issue with this demo? A game company can make an HTML5 FPS with amazing graphics. There is no reason why they can't. To clarify: the top 10 successful new tech businesses. And not necessarily financially, but that have the most impact. Also, this is a discussion about software. Sure, IBM has made a ton of money compared to Facebook. They have long-term contracts with governments and businesses worldwide; making money for IBM means waking up tomorrow. But they're boring. They're the successful company that makes all the screws; vital to the world, hugely profitable, but boring. I'm talking about new tech software companies you've actually heard of, and use their service every single day. When anyone talks about new startups, they inevitably mean a web-based company. Okay, so Facebook launches as a downloadable EXE? What about Amazon, or Twitter? Everyone has to install it to use it. There has to be a Mac version, and a Linux version. Then the iOS and Android versions. Everything is native apps. This is a terrible ideal world you live in. |
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Sure, I realise that. I'm just saying, maybe it won't be quite as soon as you're thinking that we see high performance web apps.
When anyone talks about new startups, they inevitably mean a web-based company.
Not around here (Cambridge, UK) they don't. There are plenty of tech start-ups just down the road from me, many spun off from connections to the university and research done there. Some of them make web apps, of course, but most of them don't.
I suspect, with no offence intended, that you're probably seeing through the kind of HN-vision I mentioned in another post.
Everything is native apps. This is a terrible ideal world you live in.
I'm certainly not arguing that everything should be done with native apps. In fact, in my first post to this discussion[1], I argued rather strongly against making native apps for things where a web app works fine.
There are pros and cons to each approach, and I'm just saying that I don't think arguing that desktop apps are dead makes any more sense than arguing for building native apps on every platform so you could use a simple on-line database when a single web app would do just as well or (by my original argument) perhaps better. There is plenty of room for both approaches, and as always, we should choose whichever tool best does any given job.
[1] http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=4988159