More questions than answers from way out on the long tail

SSB I Love Thee

Nearly two years ago I wrote about the age of the “big-boned” client (which today is apparently called a “fit client”). The basic premise of what I wrote then was to combine the ease of deploying web-based apps with the convenience of a stand-alone app on the desktop — something like what PandoraMan or Pyro let you do, but abstracted. What I wrote then was:

What I’d love to have is an application that lets me spawn these custom applications — a “meta application” if you will. It would basically let me configure a few things about what kinds of information needs to be stored for authentication, let’s me tweak the UI and choose various menu/toolbar options, and then creates a stand-alone application that would be specialized to a specific web-based application.

I then suggested someone with basic OS X skills could easily pull this off using WebKit. Well, today, I finally found just exactly that at Fluid. From their site:

Fluid itself is a very small application. When launched, Fluid displays a little tiny window where you specify the URL of a WebApp you’d like to run in a Site Specific Browser. Provide an application name, specify a Location and an Icon, click ‘Create’ and you’ll be prompted to launch the new native Mac app you’ve just created.

Use Fluid to run YouTube, GTalk, Flickr, Basecamp, Delicious, .Mac webmail, or any other WebApp as a separate Mac desktop application.

Seems I should have been paying attention in the last couple years because Fluid is based on Prism, a similar concept using Mozilla code instead of WebKit.

As I write this, I haven’t actually tried it, though ;)

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