Monday, November 22, 2010

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Il libro di google per raccontare il web

Nel novembre di una ventina di anni fa Tim Berners-Lee pubblicava la sua proposta per realizzare il World Wide Web. Da allora le cose sono cambiate sensibilmente: ogni giorno online ci sono miliardi di persone che consultano i loro siti web preferiti, si mandano email, guardano i video su YouTube e condividono le cose che fanno sui social network come Facebook e Twitter. Nonostante il Web faccia ormai parte della nostra vita da tempo, sono in pochi a sapere come Internet funzioni davvero.
On this basis, as Google have decided to create a picture book and animated to tell "20 things I learned on the browser and the Internet" (original English "20 Things I Learned about browsers and the Web"). The illustrations were made by the illustrator Christoph Niemann, while the lyrics were written by project managers Chrome, the Google browser.
The book is available only in English and is obviously only available online. It was made entirely in HTML5 (HTML is the code with which web pages are built, like the one you are reading now) to show how this new standard, adopted by slow the browser vendors, and by the developers of the sites, may offer a much richer Web content and open to all. Here at the Post have decided to translate the chapter of his book on HTML5 to understand something more about the future that awaits us and that, in a sense, is already here.

HTML5
or at the beginning there was no
A distance of some twenty years after the introduction of HTML, we're still wondering what the Web and how it could become. What features and applications we find, we as a people, fun, useful or even necessary? What instruments will developers need to create the most beautiful sites and applications? And finally, how all this abundance will be offered within a browser for the web?
These questions have led to the evolution of the latest version of HTML known as HTML 5, a set of features that give Web designers and developers the ability to create the next generation of online applications. Take the HTML5 tags, for example. The video was not a parent (or was not at all) of the beginnings of the Web, so Internet users had to install additional programs called plug-in to see the video in their browser. The need for easier access ai video è diventata rapidamente evidente. L’introduzione del tag nell’HTML5 consente di inserire più semplicemente i video nelle pagine senza alcun programma aggiuntivo.
Altre funzionalità comprendono la possibilità di usare alcune applicazioni anche quando si è offline e non c’è la possibilità di essere collegati alla Rete, così come la possibilità di fare drag and drop [trascinare con il mouse un elemento, come un file o una foto, all'interno di una applicazione, ndr]. In Gmail, per esempio, il drag-and-drop permette agli utenti di allegare direttamente un file all’interno di un messaggio di posta semplicemente spostando il file nella finestra del browser.
HTML5, like the Web itself, is constantly evolving, based on the users' needs and imagination of the developers. Being an open standard, the HTML5 integrates some of the best aspects of the Web: works anywhere and on any device with a next-generation browser. But as you can only watch television broadcasts on high definition televisions are compatible with the HD, so you must use a modern browser compatible with HTML 5 to be able to enjoy the sites and applications that take advantage of HTML5 features. Fortunately, as a user of the Internet, you have a wide choice when it comes to taking a browser and - unlike the TV - Web browsers can be downloaded for free.


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