Papers From W3C Web Apps Workshop Available
cying writes "Position papers from the W3C Workshop on Web Applications and Compound Documents are now available. The workshop will discuss the W3C's future roadmap for web application standards. Many weighed in, including Adobe, IBM, Microsoft, the Mozilla Foundation, Sun, and several mobile companies (including mine)."
The term 'web application' in my opinion smells of a hack. We took a nice little text markup language and added a handful of basic UI components, a few scripting languages, CGI, server side content generation engines and standard after standard layered upon each other to try to re-create a user experience that already existed in 1984. The entire reason we choose to make web applications over 'thick client applications' is because of deployment issues. Why don't we just work to make our thick applications more easily distributed instead?
http://developers.sun.com/prodtech/javatools/jssta ndard/reference/techart/nexaweb.html
Sounds like the typical Microsoft approach: "we're gonna ignore the topic, and tell you how wonderful our stuff is".
Reminds me of a MS rep at an OSS day, trying to hype their interoperability - using TCP as an example. Muppet.
Just because you can't, doesn't mean you shouldn't.
Tell W3C that they may not standardize web applications.
This will just be something else Microsoft will modify while insisting that they are following the standards.