There's a lot of Line of Business apps that can be written really easily as webapps. Right now my default toolkit for doing those is: Rails, Angular, Foundation. These are often pretty much just slightly-interactive forms and reports, and fit reasonably well within the browser model.
These aren't profit-centric apps, these are cost-reduction apps. One of the best parts about web apps in this context is that they reduce the deployment and management costs. You don't have to worry about supporting legacy versions, nor about deploying new versions of the apps to every machine in your organization. They don't have to be perfect or beautiful, they just have to save more time and money than they cost to build and maintain.
There's a lot of Line of Business apps that can be written really easily as webapps. Right now my default toolkit for doing those is: Rails, Angular, Foundation. These are often pretty much just slightly-interactive forms and reports, and fit reasonably well within the browser model.
These aren't profit-centric apps, these are cost-reduction apps. One of the best parts about web apps in this context is that they reduce the deployment and management costs. You don't have to worry about supporting legacy versions, nor about deploying new versions of the apps to every machine in your organization. They don't have to be perfect or beautiful, they just have to save more time and money than they cost to build and maintain.