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Examples:
1) Event management and messaging inside of Facebook that I already used because I signed up to it once upon a time thinking it would be a good way to meet girls (alas poor misguided fool!), and kept using to keep in touch with people.
2) Calendar, Reader, Blogspot, and the messenging thing, all of which are a quick click away from Gmail which I've used for what must now be a few years since I discovered it was better than Hotmail. (to be honest though, I channel Google Messenger through Pidgin, so that may not count)
Also, about both of these things, they are FREE. This is the major selling point of the webbased applications that I use, though there may also be a psychological laziness thing behind the attractiveness of using things that I can get to through my web-browser (Firefox!) rather than tabbing out and opening a separate application that may take an agonizing two minutes longer to load.
We're willing to put up with the lack of features and the weak integration of elements common in traditional desktop applications because web applications are wonderfully free.
Ha, I use way more web applications than I should but I agree that the most useful ones are the ones tightly integrated into pre-existing platforms.
Cloud computing is what flying automobiles were back 50 years ago: a pipe dream.
But the irony I've recently noticed is that early adopters tend to use web apps much heavier when they have some desktop clients (take Twitter - without Twhirl and other clients it would have seen much less messages flowing around). And for some reason we think that early adopters want to move everything online!
Maybe it relates to being a control freak, I dunno, but I like knowing where the files are and what's going on with them.
And sometimes you have to downloaded software for the web application. You use both the internet & desktop.
However, I do like web apps more because I could go to a friends computer or any computer and login to my own web apps and not have to take space up on their computer. Web apps are a lot more accessible.
but the need to collaborate with co-workers that don't share the same breathing space as you do could drive web applications like Google docs to more mainstream use of web applications
how much is our social networks worth towards the pushing the envelope? apparently a lot.
However, there are also a number of desktop applications I use for contributing to web-based applications. Twhirl, Pownce, Evernote, Dropbox, etc... make it much easier to utilize web-based communities. These hybrid apps may be the new wave, allowing their users more control over their direct interaction with a web app.
Both have advantages and disadvantages, i think it is inevitable that there will be more web apps, but at the same time, I think synchronization between web and desktop will be the prevailing path in all of this.