About 7 years ago, there was a discussion here about the future of the web app. At that time, people from Faithlife told us about how they wanted to use the web app for testing new ideas which would then find their way back to the desktop app, with the two apps not diverging too far from each other.
As we've seen, the web app just keeps getting better and better, which is fantastic and allows us to access our beloved Bible software on whatever machine we may have access to. New computer chips raise the question of how many code bases software publishers will have to support. We're already seeing Microsoft trying to move users to the "new" version of Outlook, which is just a progressive web app. Using that same code base across platforms will likely save MS a lot of time and effort, but it has really dumbed down the product. New Outlook is a shell of the powerful desktop app that so many of us have used, and it's really a shame.
I support whatever efficiencies Faithlife can achieve that will ultimately allow them to continue providing the world's best Bible software, but I hope we don't end up in a place where a connected web app is all we have. I would never want to be unable to have all of my resources locally installed. Internet access is more reliable than ever, but there are still times when it goes out, as well as times when I don't want to have concern myself with finding a good connection.
So, what is the future of the desktop app? Will it one day become just a local version of a progressive web app? Will we have to do without OS-specific optimizations in favor of a standard codebase across all platforms? Can anyone from Faithlife give us an update on this topic? I know things change (Bob Pritchett said in 2018 that he had no intention of selling the company), but I think it would be good to understand the vision for the various versions of Logos.
Thank you!