Up until recently, Web applications were "connected-only" applications. Users could only use the application by connecting to the central server and all data access was done in a single place. For many years, people accepted that was the limitation of Web applications. But it isn't a l... Up until recently, Web applications were "connected-only" applications. Users could only use the application by connecting to the central server and all data access was done in a single place. For many years, people accepted that was the limitation of Web applications. But it isn't a l...Nov. 26, 2008 08:00 AM EST Reads: 1,752 |
Up until recently, Web applications were "connected-only" applications. Users could only use the application by connecting to the central server and all data access was done in a single place. For many years, people accepted that was the limitation of Web applications. But it isn't a l...Aug. 3, 2008 09:00 AM EDT Reads: 1,862 |







Eric graduated from the University in Waterloo in Computer Engineering. He has worked in many industries including Wall Street financial (Morgan Stanley), automated manufacturing technology (Automation Tooling Systems Inc), and information technology (Platform Solutions Inc). He is presently a Product Manager at Sybase iAnywhere.
Up until recently, Web applications were "connected-only" applications. Users could only use the application by connecting to the central server and all data access was done in a single place. For many years, people accepted that was the limitation of Web applications. But it isn't a l...















