Office Excel: Why it’s Microsoft’s not-so-secret weapon in no-code app development
From my perspective, Excel remains the single most important tool in data analysis and manipulation. While it may not always be the final resting place Whether it is data integrations or merging two disparate systems into one, Excel is indispensable.
By Liam Tung – Low-code, no-code or visual-based coding is getting more attention these days.
Amazon Web Services (AWS) in June launched a beta of Honeycode. Google in January snapped up low-code outfit AppSheet and killed off AppMaker for Workspace, formerly G Suite, also beefing up Google Cloud with the Business Application Platform in September.
Salesforce has its Lightning platform, while Oracle has Application Express (APEX), and there are more offerings from Appian, Zoho, ServiceNow and others vying for a slice of businesses’ undergoing digital transformation.
Enter low-code or no-code. The promise of low- and no-code platforms is that business users can create mobile and web apps by pulling data from spreadsheets or databases to help their colleagues access data where and when they need it – in a browser or a mobile device – almost without requiring professional developers.
Honeycode is a AWS’s no-code answer to building mobile and web apps. AWS nodded to VisiCalc, a 1970s predecessor to Excel for the Apple II distributed on a 5.25-inch disk, in its blogpost for Honeycode.
The spreadsheet concept is still relevant today but sharing needs and the volume of data have changed. Low-code promises a half-way point between either sticking with a complex spreadsheet or paying a developer, if you could find one, to turn it into an app. Read On:
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