HTML vs Windows clients
Posted: Mon Nov 09, 2015 10:40 am
Apologies if this topic has beeen discussed here.
I am wondering whether my TM1 skills will still be marketable in 5 years' time, given IBM's HTML/Java-based strategy for TM1 clients, without entirely embracing the new way of doing things and learning in depth about a much larger stack of TM1 clients. I'm getting on and have about 6 years of working life left.
Am I deluded in drawing a comparison betweeen the current IBM strategy and that of MS with VBA vs .NET? Microsoft, for good technical reasons, wanted Office development to be done with .NET, Visual Studio, VSTO etc. It effectively stopped development of VBA around version VB6 and yet today there are thousands if not millions of business-critical VBA models still in place and MS still bundles it in every new version of Office.
Will we ever see complete redundancy of the Windows client - based models in TM1, or is the critical mass of installed models too great for the wholesale change to HTML/Java? Or, has IBM succeeeded in the strategy and I'd better go back to school right now?
Does anyone have an opinion?
I am wondering whether my TM1 skills will still be marketable in 5 years' time, given IBM's HTML/Java-based strategy for TM1 clients, without entirely embracing the new way of doing things and learning in depth about a much larger stack of TM1 clients. I'm getting on and have about 6 years of working life left.
Am I deluded in drawing a comparison betweeen the current IBM strategy and that of MS with VBA vs .NET? Microsoft, for good technical reasons, wanted Office development to be done with .NET, Visual Studio, VSTO etc. It effectively stopped development of VBA around version VB6 and yet today there are thousands if not millions of business-critical VBA models still in place and MS still bundles it in every new version of Office.
Will we ever see complete redundancy of the Windows client - based models in TM1, or is the critical mass of installed models too great for the wholesale change to HTML/Java? Or, has IBM succeeeded in the strategy and I'd better go back to school right now?
Does anyone have an opinion?