Am 01.10.2011 11:04, schrieb Tony Austin:
Is JavaScript so bad? Why turn it off?
Java Script is great, it is, in itself, not bad at all but a useful
method to make a better website.
BUT: as it is powerful, it is abused on a regular basis. So to turn it
off on any new site never being visited before is indeed a good idea.
So for any website-distributor I recommend the following steps to make a
site rock in the users client:
1.) present your site in HTML5+CSS3 as cool as possible
2.) provide extra-benefit using UNOBSTRUSIVE JS
3.) Tell the users explicitly that there is more and better content if
JS ist turned on.
Your page fails at least to meet 1.) and 3.)
Try to find a way to tell visitors at least, that they need to allow JS
on the site. But this is second best: present plain HTML5+CSS and tell
the users that JS can give more is better...
I am happy to have it on all the
time and the worries are much less under Linux. It's not Java or ActiveX
after all.
On 1 October 2011 10:34, Arve Barsnes<arve.barsnes@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On 1 October 2011 08:53, Lorenzo Sutton<lsutton@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On 10/01/2011 04:14 AM, Ken Restivo wrote:
On Sat, Oct 01, 2011 at 03:00:02AM +0200, Peter Crighton wrote:
Hello list,
I just wanted to let you know that I started a new blog about
Recording on Linux: http://linux-recording.blogspot.com/
The first entry (well, not counting the introduction here) is about
using the Analogue Drums Big Mono drumkit with Hydrogen. Let me know
what you think about the blog, any constructive criticism is much
appreciated!
*sigh*, Google, doesn't anyone use HTML anymore?
This is what that website looks like with JavaScript turned off:
http://storage.restivo.org/misc/blogger.jpg
I'm sure it's a fantastic blog, but, I dunno what Google has done to it.
If truth be told it seems a problem with this particular blog (which by
the
way seems a very cool idea ;) - other blogspot blogs seem to work with
JavaScript turned off.
I'm not a blogger user so I'm not sure what google puts in when you
create a
blog and what it leaves to the user. Maybe, the massive use of JavaScript
comes in for recently created ones?
That said. Yes it seems that google is pushing more and more for the use
of
JavaScript see e.g.
http://googlesystem.blogspot.com/2007/05/no-javascript-no-google-navigation.html
It seems that, without allowing javascript from blogblog.com this
particular blog doesn't work at all. Is that also owned by Google?
Arve
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