Posts Tagged ‘Microsoft Office’

RIAs and the Information Workplace

Thursday, November 29th, 2007

There is an interesting article over at Read/Write Web about Forrester’s prediction that RIAs will replace Microsoft Office and portals on the front-end. Forrester suggests that rich Internet applications (RIAs) may become the new norm for applications used by decision-makers and task-oriented workers, or as they’ve coined them employees in the “Information Workplace (IW)”.

Many of the articles about RIAs have focused on the consumer experience and impact, but the business impact of RIAs is also very significant. Just as the concept of a dashboards, which are used to show senior decision makers a visual status of key performance indicators, made ripples a few years ago, RIA-zing office applications and portals will also cause major waves. RIAs introduce a seamless, individualized, and visual user experience for processing large sums of data, and help make the chore of analyzing information easier.

Companies like BEA and SAP have already seen the light and are working to build new RIA-ized interfaces for their enterprise solutions. Let’s see how many others jump on board after reading this “_blank”>Forrester report.

RIA-zation of Office Tools

Monday, August 20th, 2007

In a recent article entitled Tipping the Microsoft Cash Cow Could Be Adobe’s Next Move, Wired speculates that Adobe may be soon getting into the office productivity tools market.

It may sound ludicrous to attack such a well-established Microsoft stronghold, but the market is in fact wide open, waiting for someone credible to make a move. Ideally, this move needs to come from someone with more muscle and a better chance to stand behind its technology in the long run than a small visionary startup could.

In addition to fine engineering, Adobe is very well positioned to provide tools that actually meet users’ needs, elegantly integrate with existing workflows, and seamlessly deal with compatibility issues (in every possible sense of the term: OS, hardware, file versions, etc.). As well, Adobe can address online/offline usage challenges, which some readers may recall the company learned the hard way.

There is so much value to be delivered to end-users by the sheer RIA-zation of office tools. In fact, almost every industry out there is waiting with open arms for landslide innovation through RIA-zation of their tools, by combining the power, expressiveness and usability of installed applications with the low-cost deployment and data centralization of Internet applications.

On the other hand, nothing convincing has come out of Microsoft Office Live, Google has great technology behind increasingly inconsistent user interfaces, and the OpenOffice crowd is just trying to play catch up with MS Office.

By the way, if you are wondering what happened to the 100M$ Adobe Ventures fund, it is now official that Scrybe – an outstanding and highly usable Flex-based calendar – got some of it. There are also rumors about Buzzword – and amazing RIA-based word processor – having gotten some too. Coincidence? I think not.