A Conversation for Diskless Workstations, Network Computers and ASPs
ASP
CrazyOne Started conversation Apr 20, 2000
The big difference between an Application Service Provider and these other products is that with an ASP you can "lease" applications so to speak, instead of having to front the costs of high-powered server equipment and software. That alone will help it catch on more, I'd think.
It's not aimed at the individual, but at big enterprise-wide software. And if they haven't worked through the potential unreliability, they'll die a fiery death I'm sure.
I still don't know why an article with little real info and lots of bashing is being approved.
ASP
Saint Taco-Chako (P.S. of mixed metaphors) Posted Apr 20, 2000
I do.
But it'll cost you to find out.
ASP
meta Posted Sep 14, 2000
The companies I know of who buy ASP-hosted applications basically do it for one of three reasons:
1) They need something fairly quickly, and don't have time to deal with in-house IS department bureaucracy; or
2) They need something incredibly quickly (like next week); or
3) They want to try the thing out, and if it works they'll move it in-house.
Problem 1 doesn't apply to every company, and in situations where it does there will eventually be an evolutionary pressure on the IS department to fix the situation, and ASP use will fade.
Situations 2 and 3 are valid, and will probably keep ASP profitable as a niche market -- but the idea that normal applications are going to go away and that everyone will rent their word processor as a service running on a server somewhere out there on the Internet... that's just ridiculous. I wouldn't be surprised if people were already denying they'd ever said it.
Key: Complain about this post
ASP
More Conversations for Diskless Workstations, Network Computers and ASPs
Write an Entry
"The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is a wholly remarkable book. It has been compiled and recompiled many times and under many different editorships. It contains contributions from countless numbers of travellers and researchers."