Saturday, September 09, 2006

Web2.0: Free Of The Desktop?

My Thinkpad died after apparently one too many Linux distro installations (I was adding a new one about every other day for a while). As a long-time Mac user in a Windows world, adding another OS to the mix made sharing files an often frustrating experience. With much more emphasis on compatible formats, moving from Mac to Windows to Linux and back again is relatively painless these days. And yet, maybe the real promise of Web2.0 is to make the OS irrelevant.

Cory Doctorow describes himself as "someone who lives in his browser." I would put myself in that category as well and have been messing around with the idea of creating my own application service provider ever since I first heard that term back in the 90s. I love the idea of using any cpu as a terminal on the net where all my data and applications are stored.

Here are a few of the apps that are making this more possible all the time:


With web-based applications and data storage that enable us to work and play beyond the desktop, could the "OS wars," and maybe the OS itself, soon be a thing of the past?

- sean

Comments:
check out www.koolim.com

supports aim, icq, msn, yahoo, irc, jabber, sametime, etc.

check it out, it rocks.
 
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