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I seriously doubt we will all ever move over to what you are suggesting. We would be moving back to the days of the 70's and 80's. The days of the dumb terminal and mainframe computing where processing was centralized. Why would 'Web OS' companies want to pay for the resources? What would manage the hardware you use to connect to the web? I too long for the days when Windows disappears, although I haven't used Windows for more than 10 years. I'm a Mac user.
What about software packages that a user would like to buy and install? Oops! Can't do that with your future model. I doubt any company will want to provide the processing power needed to support 2 million online Abobe Photoshop or Illustrator users. (Adobe Air doesn't provide most of Photoshop's functionality, bear in mind)
There are many problems with this model, and all I think it will ever amount to is an online desktop for general word processing applications and spreadsheets etc,
You will certainly never get rid of a client OS.
No.
I've never read the words "web" followed by "OS" and thought it sounded like anything other than a really stupid idea.
I think "operating systems" may become more lightweight in the future, with more and more thin client apps, and hosted storage, etc..., but web OS - nah! completely utterly daft idea.
Second point: What happens when your internet connection goes down? Or you want to take your laptop to a remote area with no web access?
Third point: Very easy for someone to phish/crack into a system like this. If someone fakes your session, or gains entry at all, they basically have root access to your entire OS. PLUS, if someone is listening to the client/server connection, they'd see anything you do on your machine.
(continued...)
In SK, the government invested heavily in infrastructure, and they have not only ubiquitous computing, but a completely different societal approach than we do.
The generation that will bring "the cloud" will be the children who are 5-10 years old now. They approach the computer as a group within social situations, and value virtual gifts almost as highly as real ones.
Once they have buying power, and are running up their first college credit cards, in about 3 presidential (and fcc) administrations, we'll be at a place where the internet is fast and ubiquitous.