Back in April I wrote how Adobe AIR (then it was still called Apollo) marks the beginning of the invasion of the web clients into the desktop. Later I wrote about the Java and .NET counterattacks (JavaFX and Silverlight) and then I wrote about Google's answer when Google Gears was announced.

Well Mozilla "Prism" demonstrates that even simple steps can help make this transition.
The main idea behind Prism is to "integrate web-applications into the user desktop experience". Behind this fancy statement we have a very simple solution - the ability to add a a desktop/start/quicklaunch shortcut to any web application (or page for that matter)and have that show in a window that is configurable so that it doesn't waste pixels on irrelevant stuff for the applications (like navigation buttons, address bar etc.) - which makes it better then just adding a shortcut yourself. Simple and elegant. Here's what my Google reader looks like with Prism:

If you want to start using it, you can just download the prototype for Mac OS X, Linux, and Windows.


 
Sunday, November 04, 2007 9:24:18 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
and there's also JNEXT (http://jnext.org) which focuses on simplicity of adding off-line capabilities to pages displayed in the Web browser.
amnon
Sunday, November 04, 2007 9:29:14 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
Interesting - Thanks, I didn't know about this one :)

Arnon
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