TechFold - Bold tech & web commentary
Bold tech & web commentary
TechFold is technology discussion, commentary, reviews, and opinions from well outside the valley. There's no koolaid to drink here, and TechFold is not in SL, or on Twitter.
From the Press Release Bin: Another WebOS
The WebOS space has one more member: Synthasite, which joins Teqlo (my first post!), YouOS, Xcerion, Facebook, and others I’m sure. The “WebOS space” is loosely defined, but all members share the common goal of trying to create the development platform on which mashups and applications are built and distributed - a lucrative market — if it really exists.
I’ve argued elsewhere that trying to create development environments like this has relatively little marginal benefit: anyone with the skill and motivation to create a web application will do so in the tool of their choice. Windows thrived as a platform because it provided a set of API’s and a hardware abstraction layer that made developing apps easier; the web generally doesn’t suffer the same level of complexity until you’re into the realm enterprise-strength applications - which these WebOS players aren’t targeting anyway.
So - where they fit into the web ecosystem I have no idea. I admire all players for the technical challenge that they’ve taken on, but I’m not holding my breath for any to become a breakaway success - with the exception of Facebook who - interestingly enough - created the market for their platform before creating the platform itself.
development, facebook, google, ide, microsoft, synthasite, teqlo, web os, webos, xcerion youosIf you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed!
Time for an Internet File System (IFS)?

I can’t tell if this idea is stupid & superfluous or not. It surfaced when I was trying to write a review for Xcerion (an “Internet OS” developer), and thought about what it would mean to work 100% in the cloud. The scenario that I bumped my head against was that unless you did all of your work inside a single “OS” (Google Docs & Sheets, for example, or on apps within the Xcerion platform), managing files and work scattered across the net, behind different passwords, formats, export capabilities, privacy policies, and more, would be a severe pain.
That is to say, what happens when you use Google Sheets, Zoho Writer, and Picnik on a daily basis to get things done, and Box.net as an online repository?
Perhaps I’m old school, but whether my data is in the cloud or in local storage, I still see value to centralization:
- Being able to search and index all of my files
- Being able to organize my files topically - i.e.: a spreadsheet for trip expenses, photos, letters, etc. from a trip all stored together (whether tagged, or in folders) as opposed to scattered across multiple services.
- Not depending on the solvency of multiple companies to take care of my data
- Being able to run a centralized backup function on all of my data (ironically, this probably means backing up my cloud storage to a local harddrive)
- Being able to open a file created in one application in another (i.e.: opening a Word file in OpenOffice == opening a Google/Writely file in Zoho Writer) without a cumbersome import/export process
So - what I think I’m suggesting is an “Internet File System” that would let online applications save to and load data from a third party storage solution. This would include:
- A Protocol: A standardized protocol for applications to implement on their end, and storage providers to implement on theirs that would manage the connection seamlessly between the two. The protocol might include two-way communication so that I could see how much space was left in my Box.net account from within Google Docs & Sheets.
- Universal and Free: Note that this is a “protocol” not a product - it should be something like SOAP that anyone can implement. And FOSS’d.
- Encryption and Authentication: I’d like to be able to give Google my Box.net password once, and have Google manage authentication with Box.net from that point forward. I’d also like the datastream between application and storage to be encrypted.
- File Meta-Data Standard: Some sort of meta-data standard for the file objects that would be saved such that when looking in Box.net, I can click a spreadsheet file and have it open in Google Sheets where it was created.
- Format Meta-Data Stardard: A central repository of DTD’s/XML Schema descriptions for data/file formats, to allow for easy conversion of file types between applications. I don’t want to be locked into a particular application by its format. Format owners retain ownership of their format (and could GPL it if desired), but regardless of ownership it should be available in parseable format for other to build converters around.
Ok - that’s a tall order to be sure. I have trouble imagining many companies wanting to give away control to that degree, and to that point, this post is more to plant a seed or spur discussion than anything. Plus, as noted, I may be in conceptual never-never land and all of this sounds really dumb.
At the end of the day, though, I want to jump into the cloud. I’m ready. I just don’t think the cloud is yet.
EDIT: Cloud Talk is getting some action out there. [via Techmeme]
applications, cloud, google, laszlo, s3, writely, xcerion, youos zohoIf you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed!

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