Why the future is local app
The cloud made software convenient, then quietly took your speed and your privacy with it. Here's why the best apps are moving back onto your machine.
We've all been there. You open an app to quickly jot something down, but the page just sits there spinning. A "Reconnecting..." banner slides in. By the time the cursor finally appears, the thought you were chasing is gone.
The app didn't even crash. Your internet isn't even down. It just refused to let you work until it "phoned home" first.
For the last fifteen years we've been told that moving everything to the cloud was progress. But somewhere along the way we swallowed the trade-offs: constant spinners and outages, and a subscription bill just to open files we made ourselves. It doesn't have to work like this. The most interesting software being built right now is moving in the opposite direction, back onto the machine in front of you.
Speed is the experience
There's a rule in interface design that Jakob Nielsen pinned down back in 1993: cross 0.1 seconds and the "illusion of control" breaks. You stop feeling like you're using a tool and start feeling like you're waiting on a machine.
Most web apps blow that 0.1-second budget just by sending a request to a server. Local-first apps are different. They write to your hard drive instantly and sync to the cloud in the background. It's the difference between an instrument and a waiting room. Take Linear, the project tracker that built its reputation on this: its operations reportedly clock in around 47ms, while the same work in a traditional cloud tool can take 3,000ms or more. One feels like an extension of your brain; the other feels like a chore.
Real ownership
When your data lives only on someone else's server, you don't own it; you're a tenant. And if the "landlord" goes offline, you're locked out. In 2025 alone we saw major outages at AWS and Azure take down chunks of the internet for hours. When that happens, your work shouldn't stop with it.
Local-first software treats the network as an extra, not a requirement. Your work stays on your disk. The cloud is still there for backup and collaboration, but it's not a turnstile you have to pay or wait to pass through.
The AI excuse is gone
For years, companies argued that the "heavy lifting" had to happen on a server. AI was the ultimate version of that. Surely you need a giant server farm to run a language model?
Not anymore. Between Apple's Neural Engine and new silicon from Qualcomm and Nvidia, the hardware on your desk (and in your pocket) is finally fast enough. Tools like Ollama and Apple's Foundation Models framework let you run capable models locally and skip the monthly API bill entirely. The last thing tethering us to the cloud is coming loose.
Privacy by default
Here's the part that should worry you more than the lag. Every time an app ships your data to a server (every document you save, every prompt you type into a cloud AI), it makes a copy somewhere you don't control. Those copies are exactly what attackers are after.
2025 made that painfully clear. IBM put the average U.S. data breach at a record $10.22 million, and the year's breaches exposed the records of hundreds of millions of people. AI has made it worse: it's never been cheaper to write a flawless phishing email or clone a convincing voice. The same IBM report found that "shadow AI," where staff quietly feed company data into online tools, added about $670,000 to the average breach.
The fix isn't a smarter firewall. It's having less to steal. Data that never leaves your machine can't be taken from a server it was never on. On-device AI keeps your most sensitive inputs (your files, the questions you'd never type into a public chatbot) where they belong. The safest server is the one you never had to trust.
Why we build this way
We started getapps.cafe because we're tired of software that doesn't respect your time. Every app we host is a real native build, not a website shoved into a window. They work offline, they keep your files as real files, and they answer the moment you click.
The cloud was a detour. The future is local. Pull up a chair. We're building tools that actually belong to you.