[an error occurred while processing this directive]
[an error occurred while processing this directive]
|
| [an error occurred while processing this directive] |
|
|
COMMENTARY--In 1999, I wrote a column heralding the arrival of a new type of software, or rather an innovative new way of getting software from manufacturer to buyer. The Application Service Provider, or ASP, had all the makings of a new economy hit: Expensive packaging and distribution would be abolished, updates would be seamless and frequent, and small businesses would be able to compete with the big boys by basically renting costly CRM and sales-force-management packages online by the month. At the time, reader response to the column was mixed. "Why would I trust my company's precious data to a Web site?" the anti-ASP camp pressed, while the pro-ASP crowd exclaimed, "Finally, a better way to get the software up and running!" Torn between two models
But what happens when the ASP you know and love goes under? I learned this firsthand when my personal ASP of choice, Sportbrain, closed up shop. Sportbrain was a fitness gadget you clipped to your waistband. At the end of the day you uploaded your data to a password-protected Web page and tracked hundreds of fitness stats, many of which were automatically displayed as charts and graphs. When Sportbrain closed, my six months of daily data went with the company, not me. Because the browser was the only software I had on my PC, I had no way to open the window on my stats, and worst of all, with no place to dial into. The Sportbrain gadget was 100% brain-dead, even though it would still collect information I could no longer pry from within the device. The pain experienced by the loyal customers was chronicled on the bulletin boards during the final days of the company. Many people came up with solutions, offering to pay for the service, or find a way to trick the device to dialing the local PC, but in the end, the site was shuttered and our data was history. Lessons learned Oracle, Microsoft, and the other big names are working as we speak, to fine-tune the power of the ASP model, which means greater safety but probably no great savings. Consumer-based ASPs continue to be the most vulnerable, but are also less deadly. What this means for everyone is that the ASP model isn’t going away, but like all things Internet these days, we’ll just title chapter one, "You get what you pay for" and chalk it up to experience.
|
[an error occurred while processing this directive]
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||