Posted on 12/18/2006 10:09:46 AM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach
Peter Coffee, an editor of eWeek magazine has published a list of 25 killer apps of all time. This list totally reflects his personal timeline in the computer publishing business and sets a benchmark for killer apps although Im a fan of his work. Ive been in technology since 197x Big deal. I wrote code on a DEC PDP-11 using a Hazeltine terminal at Univ of Miami back in 1979. The technology sucked big time.
Mitch Kapor made boucoup $$ from Lotus 1-2-3. Many of us cut our teeth on 1-2-3s macros. The Lotus Magazine from the 1980s was a GOLDMINE of information for spreadsheet nerds. My 1-2-3 macros were sometimes pages long and could repaint the bathroom and regrout the kitchen counter. Then came Excel with VBA and oh-my-God it was the equivalent of programming nirvana. 1-2-3 was reserved for the back shelf at Goodwill. And of course we didnt have to shoe-horn it into dBaseIII+ > we just linked or cut-n-pasted it into MS-Access and instant database relativity. Woo hoo!!
So what is the real killer app list? I could list my own. Peter has DEFINITELY set off an interesting discussion with this article. Sad part is, many folk dont have tools in their toolbox and wouldnt know how to maniuplate data (or want to, for that matter). But if youre a data guy (or gal) what does work for you? Does it work for your corporation? Many of us have jobs because we know how to manipulate data when others dont. Makes for a strange niche in life.
Outlook Express!!
/sarc
EDLIN.
I think the World Web Web and browsers like Firefox are the Killer Apps/....coupled with software setups like the FreeRepublic Bulletin Board....Browser....remembering device....whatever one chooses to call it.
Outlook Express!!
/sarc
GROIN!!
How many corrupt .dbx files have I come across just from backing them up to reinstall Windows and then restore the .dbx files. What a piece of junk. Granted I have had similar occasional problems with .pst files for Outlook. But that happens rarely and is usely the older back up .pst files.
i still use Lotus SmartSuite when i'm working in Windows. If i ever get smart enough to be able to use WINE, i'll be using it out of SuSE. Love it.
Built on VM/370...
I'm surprised that WordPerfect didn't make the list.
It was THE PC-based word processor of the late 80s and was a predacessor to MS Word.
Myst was the game that first made graphics so important for gamers.
It should be on lots of lists....but every list is personal....apparently Coffee started with Word....probably came with his computer.....
MOST = Maynard Operations Sequencing Technique
and Vantage is one of the many Enterprise Resource Planning apps out there.
Man, that list brings back memories. I remember when I first encountered WordStar. It was like a miracle. You could edit ON THE *FLY*. Cool stuff for someone who grew up writing school papers on an electronic typewriter.
Can't believe nobody's mentioned Photoshop yet.
"I'm surprised that WordPerfect didn't make the list.
It was THE PC-based word processor of the late 80s and was a predacessor to MS Word.
Myst was the game that first made graphics so important for gamers."
Symantec's Act was left off as well and that was THE desktop database prior to MS Access. Of course MS also had Fox Pro(I think that was what it as called) prior to Access. Hospital I worked at five years agao was still using that.
And it wasn't even that useful until Windows 3.11 when they added some basic networking.
And what about FLASH....?
Guess Coffee doesn't use them...
Photoshop is on the list.
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