Web Design Guide

Web Page Design Programs Section


Welcome to Web Design Guide

 

 

Web Page Design Programs Article

Java scripts can be very useful to your web design. It can add lot of functionality to your website.

But you need to be careful when using Java in your web design efforts. Internet Explorer has removed Java support and this can negatively affect your web design schemes.

Why Java Will Drive Your Visitors Away.

Actually the problem is not with Java itself. It is a tug of ware between Sun and Microsoft and the poor web design professional is caught in the middle of all these.

Now Java came out of Sun and Microsoft came out with JVM (Java Virtual Machine) and both were moving together. During this truce period there was no confusion in the web design process.

And the result is that Java ( another plugin ) became a hated stuff by users. And Java has an even worse reputation than most. Why?

Here are some reasons.

Microsoft and Sun.

Java is an open standard, and it's one that Microsoft originally embraced. They made their own Microsoft JVM (Java Virtual Machine) part of Internet Explorer. This led to the rapid growth of Java on the web.

Sun, Java's creator, then decided to sue Microsoft, for being anti-competitive in bundling the Microsoft JVM with the world's most popular web browser. This was a bad move – Sun wanted Microsoft to bundle its JVM instead, but it actually led to Microsoft simply removing all Java support from Internet Explorer, and forcing users to go and download Sun's (from www.java.com ) if they wanted to see Java content.

That leaves us in the situation we're in today, where users can be divided into three groups:

1. Users with old versions of Internet Explorer. They have the Microsoft JVM, which is wildly incompatible with Sun's.

During this time web design professionals did not have any problems. Everything was moving fine. And Java began to spread like anything on the Internet.

2. Users with new versions of Internet Explorer but no JVM. They don't have a JVM, meaning that you'll have to get them to download Sun's to see Java content – and Sun's JVM is a big download.

3. Users with Sun's JVM. They're not only the smallest group, but they're also using a JVM that is incompatible with Microsoft's.

This leads to a situation where you can either code for the smallest group of users (who have a supported plugin), or the next largest one (who have an unsupported one), or try to force the largest group (who have no plugin) to get one. This is obviously an extremely bad situation to find yourself in.

The net result is today's web design professionals are in state of confusion! How do you cater to all the above three different groups.

The Speed Problem.

Java's problems, though, don't end there. Even assuming that your user has one JVM or the other, they still won't want to use Java content. The big reason for this is that Java is very, very slow.

How slow? It's slow to the point where going to any page that has Java on it will cause most browsers to freeze up for about 30 seconds or so, appearing to have crashed completely. Users are unlikely to be patient enough to wait for the Java to load, instead press control, alt and delete to get out of there.

Java's adherents mostly refuse to acknowledge the speed problem, but it's bad enough that downloadable desktop programs written in Java have become a complete joke – anything useful written in Java will be pretty promptly re-written in someone else to make a more responsive and usable version. Java programs are simply impractical thanks to their speed problems, and no matter how fast computers get it doesn't seem to get any better.

The Looks Problem.

The next problem is the way Java tends to look. It uses non-standard buttons, not to mention rather simple and programmatically tough ways of producing graphics. To put it less kindly, content produced with Java tends to be ugly.

This is one more important factor that professional web design folks did not like. After all, every ones wants their website to look neat and clean and not ugly.

If you try producing the same application in Java and in Flash, there's just no comparison. The Flash version might be a little harder to code, but it will work in so many more browsers, load much faster, and look better when it does. You would be very silly at this point to use Java instead of Flash, and there are very few things that Java applets can do but Flash can't.

Java on the Server.

At this point, Java is pretty much dead on the desktop, or in the web browser. For this reason, if you're going to write programs in Java, you should keep them where they belong and work best – on the server. Java on the server is growing all the time, and is a good alternative to many other ways of doing things, providing your server is powerful enough for it. Sun knows this, and is re-focusing its Java efforts at server installations, as an alternative to Microsoft's .Net. Let's leave client-side Java to rest in peace.

Hope this information on Java and web design has been useful to you. You will find more articles on web design on this site.
 

 


Web Page Design Programs Best products

 

 

 


Web Page Design Programs News

Marketing in the World of the Web - Wall Street Journal

Retailers will eventually recover from the consumption tailspin that threatens this holiday season. But quite apart from the recession, there are other, profound changes underway in the retail sector. As the evidence mounts about the power of social ...

Read more...


Course overhaul planned at High Tech before 2009 - Daily Breeze

Some courses at High Tech North will receive an overhaul for the 2009 to 2010 school year, according to officials from the school. In conjunction with the Florida Department of Education, the north Cape Coral technical school will offer some of its ...

Read more...


The Social - CNET News

As part of the launch, a directory of 30 applications will be available for Ning members to embed in their profiles, which they use for any of the hundreds of thousands of networks created with Ning. They'll have variable "skins" to adopt the design ...

Read more...


Review: iPhone 3G Page 1 of 3 - Mac Central

When the original iPhone arrived in June 2007, it was greeted by massive hype and long lines at Apple and AT&T stores. But a lot of people who were interested in the iPhone held back, guided by a thoughtful and careful technological principle ...

Read more...


Ray Ozzie Wants to Push Microsoft Back Into Startup Mode - Wired News

Ray Ozzie, Microsoft's new chief software architect, is on a mission. Photo: Lionel Deluy The keynote speaker at this past summer's TechReady conference—a gathering of 6,000 or so Microsoft engineers from around the world—was the company's chief ...

Read more...


The FBI's lawbreaking is tied directly to President Bush - Salon

Multiple media outlets are focusing on the unsurprising story that the FBI seems to have been abusing its powers under the Patriot Act to issue so-called "national security letters" (NSLs), whereby the FBI is empowered to obtain a whole array of ...

Read more...