Comment by carlosjobim
16 hours ago
The only people I meet who voluntarily use web apps in their day to day are Linux users who have convinced themselves that it is good enough because there aren't any good native apps on Linux.
And then you of course have corporate, who will not switch from Windows.
Nobody will voluntarily spend all day working within Gmail or Google docs.
You also conveniently cut out photo editing and design in your quote.
Edit: Also I wonder if all you server-admins, programmers and gamers would have switched to Linux if your only option was to do your work or gaming within a laggy and inadequate web-app? But you want other people to suffer that.
> The only people I meet who voluntarily use web apps in their day to day are Linux users who have convinced themselves that it is good enough because there aren't any good native apps on Linux.
Funny, there are whole companies, pretty big ones at that, that run entirely on the G Suite. Regardless of OS.
Yes, exactly. Note my word "voluntarily". When people have the option to decide for themselves which tools to use, very few actually want to work with corporate software like the G Suite, OneDrive, MS Office and such. I'll give an exception for Excel. I'm not a spread sheeter, but I've heard it's best in class.
I don't know if you've noticed, but Microsoft are moving apps to web versions as well.
And OS X has top tier native apps for any use case imaginable. With a very healthy ecosystem of boutique developers and indie developers.
If the idea is moving from Windows to something better, then Mac is usually the answer. Unless you're a server admin, programmer, or gamer. Then Linux is probably great. Everybody wants to have tools that work well for the task.