After all, we all live in a common Cyberworld

Kacper Raubo
1 reply
After all, above all devices and operating systems they are driven by, we all live in a common Cyberworld and the operating systems are just its interfaces that define the way we see, feel and thereby experience it. The key determinant of to what extent we feel the commonality is the number of apps available on all of the interfaces. If we can seamlessly start a job on Mac and finish it on Windows, then, in fact, we do not feel any switch. Otherwise, using two different operating systems, we feel like we are in completely different environments and this is wrong because it is a false impression. We all live in the same. Hence, since the ones that define how truly we see and feel the Cyberworld are apps, they are what we should focus on in order make the commonality visible. And in my opinion the aspect that affects our perception is the way we get and distribute apps across different operating systems. From my point of view, if we unify the way users get and developers distribute apps, enabling to make it from single place regardless of using OSes, we will "open" the Cyberworld, making it existing not only implicitly but explicitly as well. This is my thesis and this product (https://www.producthunt.com/posts/software-store) is my try to verify it. I am curious of your thoughts.

Replies

Maria
This is really amazing insight, and a very nice, inspiring concept! I wish you luck and joy in developing your thesis, and I wish you a lot of success with Software Store tool! ^__^