In 2013, the web development blog CSS Tricks ran a poll with a single question: “Is it useful to distinguish between “web apps” and “web sites”? Seventeen thousand people responded. 72% answered Yep. They are different things with different concerns. The remaining 28% answered Nope. It’s all just the web.
That question, circulated in different ways, has become a common refrain. Every few years it re-enters the web development zeitgeist. At the center, however, lies the same question: is the web divided? Is there one web meant for desktop-like applications and another meant for content. One web that serves, and another that creates.
In practice, it offers little more than a thought experiment, though a useful one. It can frame a moment of web development practice. Equally useful is tracing the conversation back to one of the earliest times the conversation cropped up, back to the history of DHTML and a company called Oddpost.
A History of DHTML and Web Applications - The History of the Web
Submitted 3 hours ago by alyaza@beehaw.org to technology@beehaw.org
https://thehistoryoftheweb.com/postscript/web-apps-web-sites-are-they-all-the-same/
cypherpunks@lemmy.ml 1 hour ago
Weird this article doesn’t mention Hotmail and RocketMail, which both had email client web apps in 1996.