Will IBM ever convert Perspectives to use the Rest API?
Posted: Wed Dec 09, 2020 10:01 pm
Perspectives assumes a LAN where a small request can be immediately acted upon. The feedback from the response to your chat can be used to better direct your query. Citrix allows this behaviour to occur over a WAN by transmitting the display only, like the terminals in the 1980s. That said, it is a marvel of compression.
IBM has tried to replace perspectives with Performance Modeller which is still a thick client. I assume the logic was that PM would provide a superior interface, in that it would look modern. In actuality the interface was inferior and buggy.
Now we have PAW which is an improvement on PM. This is a web based interface that uses Javascript to give immediate feedback on a WAN. Some of the new functionality (eg hierarchies) is only available through PAW. Yet this interface is yet to gain the momentum to make it a 'well used' system, where the bugs have been driven out by overwhelming usage. The vast majority of the world still runs on the Perspectives/Citrix combo. It has the comfort of familiarity, and being super quick and rock solid. Also PAW and even PM never replicated the functionality of Perspectives.
In retrospect, I suppose, the PM path of revolution may not have been correct. Microsoft evolves all of its products with backward compatibility. IBM decided to make the quantum leap when maybe the best thing would be evolution.
Some of the things that cripple Perspectives could be easily dealt with such as switching off the entire local update when a process is run. Having failed with PM, would it still not be prudent to try and migrate the user base to a new paradigm, by simply moving perspectives forward into a web based product, given that while PAW is clearly superior to PM, it still may not gain the momentum to make users to make the jump from Perspectives?
IBM has tried to replace perspectives with Performance Modeller which is still a thick client. I assume the logic was that PM would provide a superior interface, in that it would look modern. In actuality the interface was inferior and buggy.
Now we have PAW which is an improvement on PM. This is a web based interface that uses Javascript to give immediate feedback on a WAN. Some of the new functionality (eg hierarchies) is only available through PAW. Yet this interface is yet to gain the momentum to make it a 'well used' system, where the bugs have been driven out by overwhelming usage. The vast majority of the world still runs on the Perspectives/Citrix combo. It has the comfort of familiarity, and being super quick and rock solid. Also PAW and even PM never replicated the functionality of Perspectives.
In retrospect, I suppose, the PM path of revolution may not have been correct. Microsoft evolves all of its products with backward compatibility. IBM decided to make the quantum leap when maybe the best thing would be evolution.
Some of the things that cripple Perspectives could be easily dealt with such as switching off the entire local update when a process is run. Having failed with PM, would it still not be prudent to try and migrate the user base to a new paradigm, by simply moving perspectives forward into a web based product, given that while PAW is clearly superior to PM, it still may not gain the momentum to make users to make the jump from Perspectives?