Flash normally get's used for awful brochureware (as lampooned in the excellent Skipintro.com) but I think it's best use is as a lightweight GUI for web applications and projects like elearning.
It provides a highly controlable lightweight enviroment that never breaks (providing your users have the plugin). I mainly use it on intranets/extranets as here you know your target audience & this is where more serious apps are hosted anyway.
If authored correctly Flash can be much more effective on a low bandwidth connection than HTML. On an elearning project the flash developer knocked up 30 minute modules that weighed less than 200k! The users on 56K can be interacting with the content as the rest streams down. The trouble is so much flash on the web is bloated gunk produced by graphic artists (with no usability knowledge) rather than GUI developers.
Macromedia is bang on track to make Flash a GUI standard with these changes, particularly as it seems one of the few things that works on different set top boxes, Mobiles, PDAs & Desktop OS's. They just need to make it more accessible for disabled users, what about a version of the player that interoperated with a speech browser?
If you ever want to know where he got Bladerunner's atmostphere from it's from his upbringing in the North East of England, particularly his time studying in Hartlepool. The seal sands were a particular inspiration, it's miles upon miles of chemical plants. When you drive through at night it's just like being in his LA of the future, particularly the flames shooting into the sky.
His nothern upbringing propably also explains why it's always raining in his films...:-)
Just to keep testing American types to see if you learnt our language correctly..:)
Seriously though, they'll take anyone on the development programme. I'm registered but am currently negotiating with my wife on whether this is a mission critical purchase...!
Classic Saab's are the ultimate nerd car, they were designed by vikings and hand built by trolls!
*** FULL DISCLOSURE *** I'm a computer programmer who drives a 20 year hold Saab 900 T16 Turbo convertible ;-)
Flash normally get's used for awful brochureware (as lampooned in the excellent Skipintro.com) but I think it's best use is as a lightweight GUI for web applications and projects like elearning.
It provides a highly controlable lightweight enviroment that never breaks (providing your users have the plugin). I mainly use it on intranets/extranets as here you know your target audience & this is where more serious apps are hosted anyway.
If authored correctly Flash can be much more effective on a low bandwidth connection than HTML. On an elearning project the flash developer knocked up 30 minute modules that weighed less than 200k! The users on 56K can be interacting with the content as the rest streams down. The trouble is so much flash on the web is bloated gunk produced by graphic artists (with no usability knowledge) rather than GUI developers.
Macromedia is bang on track to make Flash a GUI standard with these changes, particularly as it seems one of the few things that works on different set top boxes, Mobiles, PDAs & Desktop OS's. They just need to make it more accessible for disabled users, what about a version of the player that interoperated with a speech browser?
His nothern upbringing propably also explains why it's always raining in his films...:-)
Guess who uses IIS? eBay, Dell, Gateway, Intel, Nasdaq, Compaq, most of the UK Government sites... etc.
Most of the UK government sites I know about run apache. The cabinet office did switch to IIS and then got hacked...
Just to keep testing American types to see if you learnt our language correctly.. :)
Seriously though, they'll take anyone on the development programme. I'm registered but am currently negotiating with my wife on whether this is a mission critical purchase...!