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I'm not here to defend Google apps (although I use them everyday) as much as web apps in general.

> Once you're used to real applications

What makes an application 'real' as opposed to 'not real'? Did you mean 'native'?

> It's not just the features that are missing

One potential upside to web apps is that, by constraint, a lot more thought needs to go into what should be included and what should be left out. For example, I find a lot of features in Word, Excel, etc. to be completely unnecessary and, moreover, counterproductive. A stripped-down interface, and even functionality set, does have some advantages.

> I can't assume I can right click and get anything useful

Often the case for native apps, although - admittedly - less so

> The concept of a consistent menu bar you can access with hotkeys is gone

Ditto. OSX almost solves the former at the expense of the latter. Applications like Chrome break the single-menu paradigm, though. Windows has a host of applications that invent their own menu styles/behaviours.

> And the input lag is intolerable.

Which specific file type? I rarely have problems with documents or spreadsheets.

> Having all of my documents stored centrally is a real, but small, convenience

It's a massive convenience for me. Dropbox is a good alternative, but I never want to go back to the days of having to remember to carry a specific USB stick everywhere I go and/or using network drives that are a nightmare to access anywhere but the office.



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