Flash is just one web technology out of dozens. It has no relationship to creating good content or websites. It's just one technology. An obsolete one, too.
Flash is mobile friendly, Flashbuilder directly builds to Android and iPhone with the same code base.
Flash is easier to develop and prototype than any language I've ever used. If you know C/C++ or Java, you can prototype quicker in Flash than those two languages. You just get more done in Flash with less code.
Really the only reason not to use Flash is that Steve Jobs said not to use it. If Bill Gates told you not to use Netscape back in the day, would people have listened to him? Apple just doesn't
You can build apps with Flash that get CONVERTED to apps that will run on various platforms, but Adobe KILLED Flash Player for ALL mobile platforms two years ago, didn't you hear?
"Our future work with Flash on mobile devices will be focused on enabling Flash developers to package native apps with Adobe AIR for all the major app stores. We will no longer continue to develop Flash Player in the browser to work with new mobile device configurations (chipset, browser, OS version, etc.) following the upcoming release of Flash Player 11.1 for Android and BlackBerry PlayBook."
"Apple just doesn't like multiplatformed competition."
Apple had very good technical reasons not to want Flash on iDevices. They told Adobe for YEARS, "give us a good version of Flash for mobile" and Adobe couldn't deliver. Every review of Flash on an Android device talked about how crappy it was. Adobe eventually gave up. No matter how you want to read bullshit like "Over the past two years, weâ(TM)ve delivered Flash Player for mobile browsers and brought the full expressiveness of the web to many mobile devices" the fact is they killed it, and people rarely say "this product was too successful and beloved so we stopped making it."
they didn't deliver nor did they see any future in it... but it wasn't really a quality issue.
it would have needed to be a crippled version or one that would have ran only some perverted signed stuff approved by apple. you see, just a regular flash player would have sidestepped apple store controls.
(and fuck with all the holes that have been in mobile safari while it's running as root so look who's talking..)
That's missing the point. "Saying no to Flash" implies that there are bloated, insecure "webapp" frameworks which you should say "yes" to.
No, I don't think it is. That's like saying when I say "no, I don't want to be punched in the face" it implies I'm saying "yes" to getting kicked in the balls.
Put content on your site. If you need anything heavier than GET/PUT parameters, just don't make it a website.
If you can't envision or program anything more that GET/PUT then you can't make it into a website (which is probably for the best).
No, I don't think it is. That's like saying when I say "no, I don't want to be punched in the face" it implies I'm saying "yes" to getting kicked in the balls.
To continue the analogy, it certainly does if you're surrounded by twenty people alternately kicking you in the balls and punching you in the face, and you only object to those punching you in the face.
If you can't envision or program anything more that GET/PUT then you can't make it into a website (which is probably for the best).
You seem to have missed the key point, which is "don't make it into a website". There are many useful things in this world which can be made, and not all of them should be websites.
Take everything you know about Web 2.0 and throw it in the trash. The world doesn't owe you a great website. If you build it they will come. Just look at how reddit had to fake having an active community before they actually had one.
Great content? This must be geared to entertainment providers. Companies doing business on the web need to have easily accessible products or services on their site. Take Newegg for example. Throw away GoDaddy's website.
SlowDaddy's website is a moving target of bad UI implementation. It's designed to shove one more "but wait, how can you pass this up!" offers in front of you just when you thought you were finally done. Of course, it's hard to tell where the information starts and the "hey, hey, look at me!" stops.
This reads just like the last five or ten reviews I've read on various "how to build winning Web sites" books. I was actually chuckling by the time I got to the end. I felt like I'd just won a game of O'Reilly Bingo. What makes this book better than previously available books? Or are the books coming so thick and fast at this point that there's no time for any of them to become "standard references", and no motivation to compare them?
You're making the mistake of assuming that means that you *must* have 'great content' to 'keep users'.
Which is either not true, or 'great content' has been defined as 'any content that keeps users', and then we might be able to say 'this review was great content' with a completely straight face.
This reads just like the last five or ten reviews I've read on various "how to build winning Web sites" books. I was actually chuckling by the time I got to the end. I felt like I'd just won a game of O'Reilly Bingo. What makes this book better than previously available books? Or are the books coming so thick and fast at this point that there's no time for any of them to become "standard references", and no motivation to compare them?
... He tried putting this on his website but nobody ever came back
Really? The beauty of Flash websites, here on Slashdot of all places?
Indeed. While reading the sumary, I thought they had a database mistake and republished a review from when authoring websites in flash was thought to be a good idea (about ten years ago? I've not seen one of those for a while now.)
"1. Start with Your Audience 2. Involve Stakeholders Early and Often 3. Keep it Iterative 4. Create Multidisciplinary Content Teams 5. Make Governance Central 6. Workflow that Works 7. Invest in Professionals and Trust Them "
I've seen enough powerpoints to know that the first layoff is less than two quarters away. Isn't that list a template from "MBA for dummies"?
I'm sure the process is more complicated than I think, but it bothers me that we need an entire book to tell people that you should have something to say *before* you try to communicate with others. Perhaps a visit to Condescending Corporate Brand Page would be more helpful.
Many many professionals long ago abandoned Flash as it became easier to make "pretty" websites with useful dynamic content without it. It was always a nasty piece of technology to work with. So why does the reviewer mention it? Maybe because he's hardly an expert in this field himself? Take this quote: "You will likely find the sites you intuitively return to coincidentally happened to be those very sites that have done it right and have the content you want. "...no shit Sherlock. As if we weren't saying this 15 years ago.
Truth is Ben Rothke writes anodyne book reviews as evidenced by:
I might write some half-conceived ideas and submit them for review and maybe I too can have a "great resource" of my very own? (P.S. Ben - the SEO boost here is free! But I am making it possible to Google for "Ben Rothke underwear scandal" in return)
You know what a book is, right? Well a book review is a review of a book. And you know what anodyne is, right? Well an anodyne book review is a book review that is anodyne. And just in case you don't know what anodyne is: http://www.lmgtfy.com/?q=anodyne [lmgtfy.com]
Your observation that I write anodyne book is accurate.
With the exception of this review from September - http://books.slashdot.org/story/13/09/30/1314232/book-review-latest-two-books-by-peter-loshin [slashdot.org] – I prefer to write reviews of books that I think are exceptionally good.
I come across plenty of titles that are rubbish, but prefer not to review them.
When I come across a book that I think is a great resource, I will try to share that.
You don't see a problem with this? People need to know that some books are not worth buying to save wasting their money. They also need to know what the bad bits of books are, rather than just reading that, hey, everything is OK. To what do we compare your view with to work out what "good" means? Let me give you an example. I ride a bike. I used to get a commercial magazine that would have cycling gear reviews. Bad products would be marked out as such. Now I don't get that magazine anymore but as a member of a cycling organization I get their in-house magazine. It too has gear reviews but as it is a large charitable organization they are trying hard not to be too negative, perhaps because to avoid upsetting a manufacturer. They feel they can take fewer risks than a commercial publication. Whatever the reason, the reviews are useless. Bad point for a piece of gear are kind of papered over and a piece of gear that is only suitable for about 5 people is "OK for some". The biting criticism is missing. This means reviews lack teeth, or at least a reference point. When they review a cycle helmet they will say "this is a good product because it will protect your head". Er, great. And this is better at protecting my head than other helmets...why?
So some may ask "what style of writing does Ben Rothke find poor?" and we'll never know. Some may ask "so what layout of information in a book does Ben Rothke consider confusing?" and we'll never know. One thing is for sure I shan't be bothering to buy the books to find out because there's no incentive from reading these reviews. You realize there are squillions of similar "hey make great content" books out there, right? How does this book fit in with those? Don't know? Then what does your review tell us when we're trying to choose the best one? Think about the cycle helmet example for a second.
:::People need to know that some books are not worth buying to save wasting their money.
Agreed.
As to your bike analogy, you mentioned a commercial magazine; where people get paid. I do not get paid to review books.
If I was a professional review, then perhaps would have more time to review a wider quality range of books.:::So some may ask "what style of writing does
Thanks for the recommendation. Will try to use it for future reviews.
Lots of people review things for no money (me included). Finding fault is a very important aspect of any review regardless, and actually criticizing something dispels the "payola" accusation for a lot of people. I normally review mountaineering gear that I have bought and used, and my aim is to give a review that I'd have found useful myself. Are the pockets too small on a jacket? Are the boots badly fitting at the heel? Is the compass able to withstand a knock or two? (no it wasn't...!)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Payola......Payola, in the American music industry, is the illegal practice of payment or other inducement by record companies for the broadcast of recordings on music radio in which the song is presented as being part of the normal day's broadcast.////////
by saying "With Adobe Flash, it's possible to quickly get a pretty web site up and running". At least not if you want to be taken seriously. If you're trying to open with a joke, make it funny.
Any site that refers to me as a 'customer' (unless I'm actually shopping) has already lost me.
Shopping sites have customers. Hobby blogs have followers. Business sites (non-shopping) have visitors. News & information sites (like slashdot) have readers. Service websites have users.
I'm not a 'customer' if I'm looking at photos of the lego spaceship you made on your dining table, and I hope nobody is considered a 'customer' if they're looking at photos of your family!
I always thought the site with the advertisements was the user, and the people who visit such sites (or are dumb enough to click an ad) were the suckers. (viva adblock!)
!?! Non sequitur, surely? The book is written for organizations.
Most organizations who are in a position to enact this stuff (SMEs and upwards) actually do do this already. You can say "oh if they do it then it must be good advice" but it's just obvious. Involve stakeholders early? Well blow me down with a feather. Who would guess that (say) the lead technical documentation writer in my organization might want to be involved early in a website rewrite that involved new docs for our software?
If you need a book to tell you what content to put on your site, there's something wrong with your project. But unlike other commenters I find it totally appropriate that that kind of web sites use Adobe Flash. Sometimes having Flash disabled by default is the most effective spam filter.
The phrase "With Adobe Flash" that starts the review is orthogonal to the book and its content, which never anywhere mentions either "Adobe" or "Flash" as far as I can tell, and is unrelated to the rest of the review. The whole thing would be far better if it just started with "It’s possible to quickly get a pretty web site up and running", despite the somewhat awkward wording, since it's got everyone off on an unrelated tangent. (Neither of the words "Adobe" or "Flash" are found by an Amazon "search
I hate sites that use Flash. It's closed source, poor performing bollocks. I also hate/. posts that are obvious advertising for bad products. Steve Jobs was right to nuke it on iOS.
That's all I see of these web pages that are nothing but flash -- a big blank nothing, and a little icon telling me that NoScript has blocked something.
At that point, I decide just how interested I am in the content of the page after all. Usually, the answer is "Not interested enough", and I close the tab.
Say ! To Flash (Score:2, Insightful)
Flash isn't the way forwards. It's not mobile friendly, it's a common attack vector onto PCs and it's a resource hog.
Just Say ! To Flash
Re: (Score:-1)
Flash and content are not related (Score:2)
Flash is just one web technology out of dozens. It has no relationship to creating good content or websites. It's just one technology. An obsolete one, too.
Re:Flash and content are not related (Score:4, Interesting)
Even Adobe is getting this. You can use Flash (the authoring tools) to make HTML5 content now, which is ironic, but useful.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Flash is easier to develop and prototype than any language I've ever used. If you know C/C++ or Java, you can prototype quicker in Flash than those two languages. You just get more done in Flash with less code.
Really the only reason not to use Flash is that Steve Jobs said not to use it. If Bill Gates told you not to use Netscape back in the day, would people have listened to him? Apple just doesn't
Re:Say ! To Flash (Score:4, Informative)
You can build apps with Flash that get CONVERTED to apps that will run on various platforms, but Adobe KILLED Flash Player for ALL mobile platforms two years ago, didn't you hear?
"Our future work with Flash on mobile devices will be focused on enabling Flash developers to package native apps with Adobe AIR for all the major app stores. We will no longer continue to develop Flash Player in the browser to work with new mobile device configurations (chipset, browser, OS version, etc.) following the upcoming release of Flash Player 11.1 for Android and BlackBerry PlayBook."
November 9, 2011 - http://blogs.adobe.com/conversations/2011/11/flash-focus.html [adobe.com]
"Apple just doesn't like multiplatformed competition."
Apple had very good technical reasons not to want Flash on iDevices. They told Adobe for YEARS, "give us a good version of Flash for mobile" and Adobe couldn't deliver. Every review of Flash on an Android device talked about how crappy it was. Adobe eventually gave up. No matter how you want to read bullshit like "Over the past two years, weâ(TM)ve delivered Flash Player for mobile browsers and brought the full expressiveness of the web to many mobile devices" the fact is they killed it, and people rarely say "this product was too successful and beloved so we stopped making it."
Re: (Score:0)
they didn't deliver nor did they see any future in it...
but it wasn't really a quality issue.
it would have needed to be a crippled version or one that would have ran only some perverted signed stuff approved by apple. you see, just a regular flash player would have sidestepped apple store controls.
(and fuck with all the holes that have been in mobile safari while it's running as root so look who's talking..)
Re: (Score:0)
Flash is mobile friendly, Flashbuilder directly builds to Android and iPhone with the same code base.
No it's not, and no it doesn't.
The fact that you can prototype faster in Flash != everyone can, should or wants to.
Re: (Score:0)
That's missing the point. "Saying no to Flash" implies that there are bloated, insecure "webapp" frameworks which you should say "yes" to.
Put content on your site. If you need anything heavier than GET/PUT parameters, just don't make it a website.
Re: (Score:0)
That's missing the point. "Saying no to Flash" implies that there are bloated, insecure "webapp" frameworks which you should say "yes" to.
No, I don't think it is. That's like saying when I say "no, I don't want to be punched in the face" it implies I'm saying "yes" to getting kicked in the balls.
Put content on your site. If you need anything heavier than GET/PUT parameters, just don't make it a website.
If you can't envision or program anything more that GET/PUT then you can't make it into a website (which is probably for the best).
Re: (Score:0)
No, I don't think it is. That's like saying when I say "no, I don't want to be punched in the face" it implies I'm saying "yes" to getting kicked in the balls.
To continue the analogy, it certainly does if you're surrounded by twenty people alternately kicking you in the balls and punching you in the face, and you only object to those punching you in the face.
If you can't envision or program anything more that GET/PUT then you can't make it into a website (which is probably for the best).
You seem to have missed the key point, which is "don't make it into a website". There are many useful things in this world which can be made, and not all of them should be websites.
Re: (Score:0)
To continue the analogy, it certainly does ...
You're desperately reaching ... and failing.
You seem to have missed the key point
No, I think you missed the key point: just because you can't envision or program anything more that GET/PUT then you can't make it into a website.
If we all limited ourselves to what you think is right or possible then we'd all still be blinded by GeoCities garbage and animated gifs.
Re: (Score:0)
Yup!
And it is beloved still today by way to many companies. Especially in europe!
if (Score:0)
If a website is running flash I probably won't return regardless of if there is content behind it.
Many cant even read it (Score:2)
If there was good content in a flash website, anyone using android or ios wouldn't see any of this content.
I thought Slashdot just gave me (Score:1)
Re: (Score:-1)
Re: (Score:1)
The ability to disable advertisements?
You should read that carefully. It block advertisements, not slashvertisements.
Winning at content on the Web (Score:0)
Take everything you know about Web 2.0 and throw it in the trash. The world doesn't owe you a great website. If you build it they will come. Just look at how reddit had to fake having an active community before they actually had one.
What about a product or service? (Score:0)
Great content? This must be geared to entertainment providers. Companies doing business on the web need to have easily accessible products or services on their site. Take Newegg for example. Throw away GoDaddy's website.
Re: (Score:0)
SlowDaddy's website is a moving target of bad UI implementation. It's designed to shove one more "but wait, how can you pass this up!" offers in front of you just when you thought you were finally done. Of course, it's hard to tell where the information starts and the "hey, hey, look at me!" stops.
GoAwayDaddy. Please.
Is there ANYTHING new here? (Score:4, Insightful)
This reads just like the last five or ten reviews I've read on various "how to build winning Web sites" books. I was actually chuckling by the time I got to the end. I felt like I'd just won a game of O'Reilly Bingo. What makes this book better than previously available books? Or are the books coming so thick and fast at this point that there's no time for any of them to become "standard references", and no motivation to compare them?
Re: (Score:2)
And they say "Great content keeps users" but things like buzzfeed prove how stupid that argument is.
but that doesn't disprove the opposite. (Score:2)
You're making the mistake of assuming that means that you *must* have 'great content' to 'keep users'.
Which is either not true, or 'great content' has been defined as 'any content that keeps users', and then we might be able to say 'this review was great content' with a completely straight face.
The only thing you need to design your site: (Score:2, Funny)
Read a web [xkcd.com] comic [theoatmeal.com] about your type of business's usual web sites.
Re: (Score:0)
This reads just like the last five or ten reviews I've read on various "how to build winning Web sites" books. I was actually chuckling by the time I got to the end. I felt like I'd just won a game of O'Reilly Bingo. What makes this book better than previously available books? Or are the books coming so thick and fast at this point that there's no time for any of them to become "standard references", and no motivation to compare them?
... He tried putting this on his website but nobody ever came back
Flash? (Score:4, Funny)
Really? The beauty of Flash websites, here on Slashdot of all places? What's next, Amazon's backend rewritten in VB6?
Re: (Score:2)
Indeed. While reading the sumary, I thought they had a database mistake and republished a review from when authoring websites in flash was thought to be a good idea (about ten years ago? I've not seen one of those for a while now.)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:0)
The book is about content.
Flash is about anti-content.
Thus the connection
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:0)
What's next, Amazon's backend rewritten in VB6?
I'll get right on that as soon as I'm done porting it over to Cold Fusion running on top of legacy asp.
Re: (Score:0)
The book isn't about Flash, FFS. Could you Slashtards please attempt to get past the first sentence of a blurb before you start the knee jerk posting?
Re: (Score:0)
If the very first sentence is so completely and utterly wrong then why should I expect the rest of the blather to be any more accurate?
Re: (Score:-1)
What's next? Maybe you'll stop sucking the shit out of faggot assholes and learn what a vagina is.
Let me see... (Score:3)
"1. Start with Your Audience
2. Involve Stakeholders Early and Often
3. Keep it Iterative
4. Create Multidisciplinary Content Teams
5. Make Governance Central
6. Workflow that Works
7. Invest in Professionals and Trust Them "
I've seen enough powerpoints to know that the first layoff is less than two quarters away.
Isn't that list a template from "MBA for dummies"?
The abstractness of "content" bothers me (Score:2)
I'm sure the process is more complicated than I think, but it bothers me that we need an entire book to tell people that you should have something to say *before* you try to communicate with others. Perhaps a visit to Condescending Corporate Brand Page would be more helpful.
Re: (Score:0)
If you have a place selling just 1 type of widgetfine.
What about places like Dell, Walmart and the like. Content there is complicated.
Getting it right does take a good strategywhich the book seems to be promoting.
Re: (Score:0)
"...we need an entire book to tell people that you should have something to say *before* you try to communicate with others."
Its probably aimed at college kids
Report spam (Score:1)
Strange premise(s) (Score:4, Insightful)
The book seems to part from the premises that
1) Adobe Flash is essential for building web sites that make people return
2) Without Flash, it can't be done
3) Nobody knows, yet, about the revolutionary stuff of "keeping it iterative" and "investing in professionals".
One more "XYZ for dummies", then.
Flash...? (Score:3)
Many many professionals long ago abandoned Flash as it became easier to make "pretty" websites with useful dynamic content without it. It was always a nasty piece of technology to work with.
So why does the reviewer mention it? Maybe because he's hardly an expert in this field himself?
Take this quote: "You will likely find the sites you intuitively return to coincidentally happened to be those very sites that have done it right and have the content you want. "...no shit Sherlock. As if we weren't saying this 15 years ago.
Truth is Ben Rothke writes anodyne book reviews as evidenced by:
http://www.rsaconference.com/blogs/465/rothke/job-reconnaissance-using-hacking-skills-to-win-the-job-hunt-game [rsaconference.com]
"...a great resource to help you get there."
http://www.rsaconference.com/blogs/451/rothke/digital-forensics-processing-and-procedures-meeting-the-requirements-of-iso-17020-iso-17025-iso-27001-and-best-practice-requirements [rsaconference.com]
"...will prove to be an invaluable resource."
http://www.rsaconference.com/blogs/449/rothke/information-security-governance-simplified-from-the-boardroom-to-the-keyboard [rsaconference.com]
"...a great resource."
http://www.rsaconference.com/blogs/444/rothke/fisma-compliance-handbook [rsaconference.com]
"...a great resource to use."
I might write some half-conceived ideas and submit them for review and maybe I too can have a "great resource" of my very own?
(P.S. Ben - the SEO boost here is free! But I am making it possible to Google for "Ben Rothke underwear scandal" in return)
Re: (Score:0)
what are 'anodyne book reviews' ???
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
You know what a book is, right? Well a book review is a review of a book. And you know what anodyne is, right? Well an anodyne book review is a book review that is anodyne.
And just in case you don't know what anodyne is: http://www.lmgtfy.com/?q=anodyne [lmgtfy.com]
Re: (Score:0)
"Ben Rothke underwear scandal" you say [slashdot.org]
Re: (Score:2)
I do mean Ben Rothke underwear scandal. :)
That's precisely it. You get two gold stars!
Re: (Score:3)
Re:Flash...? (Score:4, Insightful)
You don't see a problem with this? People need to know that some books are not worth buying to save wasting their money. They also need to know what the bad bits of books are, rather than just reading that, hey, everything is OK. To what do we compare your view with to work out what "good" means?
Let me give you an example. I ride a bike. I used to get a commercial magazine that would have cycling gear reviews. Bad products would be marked out as such. Now I don't get that magazine anymore but as a member of a cycling organization I get their in-house magazine. It too has gear reviews but as it is a large charitable organization they are trying hard not to be too negative, perhaps because to avoid upsetting a manufacturer. They feel they can take fewer risks than a commercial publication.
Whatever the reason, the reviews are useless. Bad point for a piece of gear are kind of papered over and a piece of gear that is only suitable for about 5 people is "OK for some". The biting criticism is missing. This means reviews lack teeth, or at least a reference point. When they review a cycle helmet they will say "this is a good product because it will protect your head". Er, great. And this is better at protecting my head than other helmets...why?
So some may ask "what style of writing does Ben Rothke find poor?" and we'll never know. Some may ask "so what layout of information in a book does Ben Rothke consider confusing?" and we'll never know. One thing is for sure I shan't be bothering to buy the books to find out because there's no incentive from reading these reviews.
You realize there are squillions of similar "hey make great content" books out there, right? How does this book fit in with those? Don't know? Then what does your review tell us when we're trying to choose the best one? Think about the cycle helmet example for a second.
Re: (Score:2)
:::People need to know that some books are not worth buying to save wasting their money.
Agreed.
As to your bike analogy, you mentioned a commercial magazine; where people get paid. I do not get paid to review books.
If I was a professional review, then perhaps would have more time to review a wider quality range of books. :::So some may ask "what style of writing does
Thanks for the recommendation. Will try to use it for future reviews.
Re: (Score:2)
Lots of people review things for no money (me included). Finding fault is a very important aspect of any review regardless, and actually criticizing something dispels the "payola" accusation for a lot of people.
I normally review mountaineering gear that I have bought and used, and my aim is to give a review that I'd have found useful myself. Are the pockets too small on a jacket? Are the boots badly fitting at the heel? Is the compass able to withstand a knock or two? (no it wasn't...!)
Payola (Score:0)
This is payola. Perhaps the worst slashdot post ever.
Re: (Score:0)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Payola ......Payola, in the American music industry, is the illegal practice of payment or other inducement by record companies for the broadcast of recordings on music radio in which the song is presented as being part of the normal day's broadcast. ////////
So who is paying who here?
Don't start an article about good web design (Score:1)
by saying "With Adobe Flash, it's possible to quickly get a pretty web site up and running". At least not if you want to be taken seriously. If you're trying to open with a joke, make it funny.
Re: (Score:0)
Isn’t that PRECISELY the point of this book?
Don’t focus on the flash, focus on the content.
customer? really? (Score:2, Interesting)
Any site that refers to me as a 'customer' (unless I'm actually shopping) has already lost me.
Shopping sites have customers.
Hobby blogs have followers.
Business sites (non-shopping) have visitors.
News & information sites (like slashdot) have readers.
Service websites have users.
I'm not a 'customer' if I'm looking at photos of the lego spaceship you made on your dining table, and I hope nobody is considered a 'customer' if they're looking at photos of your family!
Re: (Score:1)
I always thought the advertiser was the customer, and everyone else was the user regardless of content.
Re: (Score:0)
I always thought the site with the advertisements was the user, and the people who visit such sites (or are dumb enough to click an ad) were the suckers. (viva adblock!)
mod 0ip (Score:-1)
It's not about Flash... (Score:0)
Most of the comments seem to fixate on the Adobe Flash comment.
Flash is the 3rd word of the review...did anybody read more? Until the end?
It's NOT about Flash...
Re: (Score:2)
True. The rest of it was about stating the obvious however, so maybe no one felt obliged to comment on it?
Re: (Score:0)
If it was obvious, why then is there such lousy content on most web sites?
maybe he obvious is really not so obvious.
Re: (Score:2)
!?! Non sequitur, surely? The book is written for organizations.
Most organizations who are in a position to enact this stuff (SMEs and upwards) actually do do this already. You can say "oh if they do it then it must be good advice" but it's just obvious.
Involve stakeholders early? Well blow me down with a feather. Who would guess that (say) the lead technical documentation writer in my organization might want to be involved early in a website rewrite that involved new docs for our software?
Why build a website if you don't have content? (Score:0)
If you need a book to tell you what content to put on your site, there's something wrong with your project. But unlike other commenters I find it totally appropriate that that kind of web sites use Adobe Flash. Sometimes having Flash disabled by default is the most effective spam filter.
What does Flash have to do with this book? (Score:2)
The phrase "With Adobe Flash" that starts the review is orthogonal to the book and its content, which never anywhere mentions either "Adobe" or "Flash" as far as I can tell, and is unrelated to the rest of the review. The whole thing would be far better if it just started with "It’s possible to quickly get a pretty web site up and running", despite the somewhat awkward wording, since it's got everyone off on an unrelated tangent. (Neither of the words "Adobe" or "Flash" are found by an Amazon "search
OP is spam, Flash = Death (Score:0)
I hate sites that use Flash. It's closed source, poor performing bollocks. I also hate /. posts that are obvious advertising for bad products. Steve Jobs was right to nuke it on iOS.
Re: (Score:0)
what product was adfertised?
Flash web page == big blank nothing (Score:2)
That's all I see of these web pages that are nothing but flash -- a big blank nothing, and a little icon telling me that NoScript has blocked something.
At that point, I decide just how interested I am in the content of the page after all. Usually, the answer is "Not interested enough", and I close the tab.
Depends (Score:1)
Cat got your tongue? FUCK YOU SLASHDOT! (Score:0)
This piece made me feel like I was reading one of those Dilbert comics where they mash up a lot of buzzwords and present it as something substantial.