Articles Tagged 'browser-War'

Accessibility and Usability: unobtrusive Javascript

Allowing users to interact with a Web page in recent years has produced a significant increase in the use of client-side scripting: Javascript code can respond in real time and manipulate a variety of information. The Web2.0 is the ultimate expression of this capacity for interaction, in which the end user - the user-actively participates in the construction and to 'evolution of the Web site, interacting with it and helping yourself. Is referred to as User-Generated Content (UGC or - user-generated content) that sees the "navigator" definitely not passive!

To achieve this interaction, thus allowing the end user to add his contribution, we developed a series of techniques that have changed the appearance and behavior of Web pages (static so far, but now similar to the traditional applications of Desktop) in recent years. Change the content of a page, send files, giving their vote to a video or a document, register or change their personal data, are just some of the richest operations in many services (2.0 beta) on the Web

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Web 2.0: Firefox 3.0 Gran Paradiso and Apollo-

It is available online version of Firefox 3.0 Alpha 2 , code-named Gran Paradiso. Among the features announced (the final version is expected in late 2007) we can use the browser off-line mode. All this reminds Adobe Apollo, which, although not present it as your browser, it evokes the essential features.

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Browser War: the war continues?

A Sunnyvale, California, brings together Yahoo to Silicon Valley WebBuilder Mike Shaver of Mozilla, Chris Wilson, Microsoft's IE team, and Hoon Lie of Opera, to discuss the current state of eternal war between browsers.

Be emphasized are the words of Mike Shaver of Mozilla:

Do not look to the W3C for the Future

And the criticism of Apple's non-attendance:

They refused to send someone Saying That "we are busy writing software."

That, among other things, is 10 miles from where the meeting took place!

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