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What's The Greatest Web Software Ever?

An anonymous reader writes "What's The Greatest Web Software Ever Written?, Charlie Babcock of InformationWeek asks, in his follow up to last year's widely read list of greatest software period. The winner then was BSD 4.3. The new Top 12 list is a little funky in that it doesn't distinguish between apps, sites, and controls — XMLHttpRequest object set — is one of the winners. It includes many of the usual suspects, like Digg and AIM, along with some unexpected winners. (like World of Warcraft) The number one choice however, Apache server, is arguably correct."

20 of 178 comments (clear)

  1. Ever ever? by Zapotek · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Well, if you take "ever" literally... the greatest software ever hasn't been written yet.. :)

    1. Re:Ever ever? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      Common, we already know the winner, it was Windows 9x. This series of OS's created the internet we know today, full of spam, botnets, popups, porn popups that come up when you least want them, and open 5 more popups if you try to close them, god forbid anyone doesn't have anti-virus software installed, eating away at their CPU and memory utilization, and no one complains anymore for having to reboot their computer just to close a browser window.

      So thank you Windows, we have been raped by your presence and wish you a mantel in hell.

    2. Re:Ever ever? by Stellian · · Score: 4, Funny

      Well, if you take "ever" literally... the greatest software ever hasn't been written yet.. :)
      You are wrong!
      The greatest software in the world has indeed been written, and the importance of this breakthrough cannot be overestimated.
  2. Is this guy a "real" journalist? by EveryNickIsTaken · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Or just another blogger? Besides the fact that it's nearly impossible to read his article, and the fact that it lumps dissimilar items together on a top-# list, his omissions make this a waste of time. Top "web software" and no NCSA Mosaic or Netscape Navigator (1.0)? Also, I thought the WELL was a BBS/Shell account provider?

  3. WoW was robbed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    WoW is far better than Apache.

  4. My List by queenb**ch · · Score: 5, Interesting

    1 - Apache - still one of the most popular web servers out there. One of the most flexible and adaptable. It just rocks.
    2 - Routed - the router daemon that, in some shape, form or fashion, runs probably 90% of the internet. Without routers to move the traffic, the rest of it just a moot point
    3 - Netscape 1.0 - The idea of a GUI browser is fundamental to how we experience the web today. Without that, who needs dynamic objects like Flash since you wouldn't be able to see them.
    4 - Flash - The idea that you could put moving pictures, sound, and video on a web page is a pretty fundamental one that gets largely over looked.
    5 - Shockwave - The idea that could put games and other interactive media on a web page is another pretty fundamental idea that gets largely overlooked.
    6 - CSS - Stylesheets - what a blessing to every web master everywhere. Praise the Lord and pass the wine.

    I'm kinda surprised that more of my list didn't make it. Oh well......

    2 cents,

    Queen B.

    --
    HDGary secures my bank :/
    1. Re:My List by FooAtWFU · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Flash, I'll grant, begrudgingly (ack), but.... Flash *AND* Shockwave? And both of them on top of CSS? What are you smoking? Aside from the fact that it's not really a Piece of Software (and if it's there, why isn't HTML on your list, btw?)... as long as it's there, it ought to easily outrank both.

      Pass the Macromedia^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H Adobe kool-aid, wouldya?

      --
      The World Wide Web is dying. Soon, we shall have only the Internet.
    2. Re:My List by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      3 - Netscape 1.0 - The idea of a GUI browser is fundamental to how we experience the web today.

      So why Netscape 1.0? Why not either Mosaic (earlier) or Firefox (better)?
    3. Re:My List by owlnation · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'm with you apart from number 4 and 5.

      Flash is, for my 2 cents, The Worst web app out there. It breaks usability - it's totally client side and screw the user. It's resource hogging and 98% of the time it's being used where it need never be - it's only the other 2% that's valid legitimate use.

      Shockwave is much the same - although mercifully less used and abused than Flash.

      Please understand that, in all seriousness, I value Flashblock / Firefox as the singular most valuable software combination currently available on Earth. I love those Flashblock guys, they gave me the web back.

    4. Re:My List by nuintari · · Score: 4, Informative

      2 - Routed - the router daemon that, in some shape, form or fashion, runs probably 90% of the internet. Without routers to move the traffic, the rest of it just a moot point


      You are kidding right? You don't actually think that routed runs anything major do you? For starters, unix systems are not routers, they can be used as such, I use one at home. But for a backbone connection with millions of packets per second, they are a poor choice. They cannot keep up with a good cisco or foundry router.

      Next, routed implements RIP, an interior routing protocol, for use within one AS, you _never_ use RIP for external routes to other networks, that is where BGP comes into play. Might I also mention that RIP is an ancient interior routing protocol, with serious limitations that make it a poor choice for all but the simplest networks. Most modern networks run on OSPF for internal routing, RIP is just pathetic.

      I don't know anyone who still uses routed for anything serious, and certainly not the 90% figure you made up. I doubt it accounts for 1% of 1% of all routed traffic. It is just an old bat that has fallen by the wayside. Even networks that still use RIP for a segment or all of their interior routing use a better implementation of RIP than the one in routed.

      If you want to use a UNIX system for a router, I suggest you look into OpenBSD's OpenOSPF and OpenBGP.
      --

      --Nuintari

      slashdot : where an opinion can be wrong.

  5. The Java Platform by thammoud · · Score: 3

    not just the language is what is attractive to the millions of developers. While the language is nice, the fantastic libraries that are included with the VM are what makes the big difference. Is it perfect? Far from it. No platform even comes close to the library support provided by the Java platform. With the new open source license, things will only get better. Thank you Sun.

  6. Anything with a spellchecker! by gardyloo · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Oh, wait. Wrong place for THAT.

  7. "Web" and "Internet" aren't the same thing by ZorbaTHut · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The article's writer appears to have gotten this confused. As I'm sure everyone on this site knows, WoW isn't a Web application - it doesn't listen on port 80 and doesn't communicate with web browsers (barring a few status pages - you certainly can't play the game that way.) AOL Instant Messenger wasn't originally either. There are now web-based interfaces available, but he's not talking about those, he's talking about the original service which - again - didn't listen on port 80 and couldn't communicate with web browsers.

    Amusingly, his screenshot of "Hotmail" runs into the exact same problem. He's apparently decided to take a screenshot of someone using Microsoft Outlook to log into Hotmail - not a web browser. While you can obviously use Hotmail with a web browser, and I suspect the majority of people do, that screenshot is particularly badly chosen.

    Bad, bad writer.

    --
    Breaking Into the Industry - A development log about starting a game studio.
  8. Re:free advert for Vista .. by Timesprout · · Score: 5, Funny

    Thanks for mentioning Vista a couple of times in your post. We hear in the Vista marketing team really appreciate it when Vista gets a mention. I inspires us in the Vista family to really work to make Vista the best Vista that it can be.

    Thanks again for mentioning Vista. Now I'm off to sit on my balcony with a cold beer and enjoy the Vista.

    Yours etc
    Vista Marketing Team

    --
    Do not try to read the dupe, thats impossible. Instead, only try to realize the truth
    What truth?
    There is no dupe
  9. Google Maps gets my vote by SCHecklerX · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's the most useful page I ever use. I can use it to plan bike trips, drives to friends houses or bars, bike races, etc. I also use it for looking up businesses in the area, and for phone number lookups. An example of 'web 2.0' being used as the best method to create the service.

  10. Digg, really? by Rik+Sweeney · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Personally I always found Digg to be *very* OK, nothing special, mainly shovelware stories. Perhaps it's because I discovered it around September 2006.

    Unfortunately, after the whole HD-DVD key revolt, I decided Digg was just far too childish to bother with anymore. Sure, at one point Digg was probably very good, but after 1st May 2007, it died (for me anyway).

    As with every piece of software, it'd be perfect if it wasn't for the users.

  11. Autocad is clearly the most important web software by Timesprout · · Score: 4, Funny

    How else do you think Al Gore was able to design all the tubes that several of the internets run on!

    --
    Do not try to read the dupe, thats impossible. Instead, only try to realize the truth
    What truth?
    There is no dupe
  12. Re:PHP all the way. by swsuehr · · Score: 5, Informative

    Actually no, Apache isn't popular because of PHP. Apache was quite popular well before PHP was even *invented*. Apache + Perl as a development stack was quite popular prior to PHP and still is to this day.

    The LAMP stack was simply the *only* way to develop web apps and definitely didn't become popular as an alternative to ASP. Rather, ASP was developed as an alternative to the Apache stack.

  13. Napster, Baby, Napster! by theodp · · Score: 4, Insightful

    No Napster = No DSL/Cable, No YouTube, No ...

  14. Skip the Ads, here's the picks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    In the same order as the author used in the 7th ad-filled page*:

    12. AOL Instant Messenger
    11. Digg
    10. Hotmail
    9. World Of Warcraft
    8. Wikipedia
    7. XMLHttpRequest object set
    6. Amazon.com
    5. eBay
    4. The Well
    3. Craigslist
    2. AltaVista
    1. Apache

    *If you want to say thank you, mod up -- and thank YOU.