The Modern Web Solderpunk has a well thought-out commentary on the issues with web apps: gopher://sdf.org/0/users/solderpunk/phlog/web-apps-are-houses-built-on-sand.txt Of the advantages, I'd say the most important is the cross-platform nature of web apps. This was very true with the simple CGI form of server-side apps in the 90s/00s, a bit less so with modern apps that tend to brittleness with differences in javascript and CSS parsing. I would also add that web apps are increasingly being sidelined in favor of mobile apps, which are an even more restrictive way to interact with the web. At least with the current crop of javascript-heavy web apps, I still have _some_ control. The javascript runs on the client, I can tweak it or block it at will. I use this all the time to, for example, delete the read-only property on a form field, or get rid of a modal popover. Not so with mobile apps. You are locked into whatever actions the limited interface allows. I suppose this is part of the allure of SDF. For those of us who remember the pre-www internet, all of this chafes. It's like being in a straight jacket. SDF once again merges community with freedom, in part by embracing and making older protocols available, like gopher, but also by rejecting the overt commercialism and restrictions of the modern web.