Adding background music to the web site is an exciting thing for every user, but many people worry about the slow loading of the pages and the size of the large files, without having large files the back ground music can be added to the web site these can achieve professional results. There are many ways of adding back ground music to the web site, to create the sounds using the instruments midi files can be used. It has got a problem that is most sound cards do not have any decent sounds. Since no two sound cards are alike so the result is
The modern HTML provides such a function as creation of image-maps. Simply put, it is the ability of cutting an image in multiple areas, with every area having a link tied to it. So, if you click on an area of the map, you are sent to one web page. And if you click on the second area of the map, another page opens.
Basically, there are two types of image maps: server-side and client-side. The most used type is client-side maps, as there are some implementation problems with the server-side image maps.
The client-side image maps are
Writing SMIL can in some ways make accessibility seem more difficult. For questions, this web page is helpful. Here is a bit on what they have to say about text timing:
"27.4.5.1. Time containers
Media elements are placed in special time container elements (<par>, <seq>, and <excl>) that define how the media should be played. The <par> element (short for "parallel") defines a group of elements that play at the same time. The <seq> element defines a sequence of elements that play one after another, in the order in
There are many fantastic points and examples in this essay by Phillip Hoyt. One of the most unique items he brings up is the file type's abilities with regards to Gamma Correction.
"From the LibPNG site: "Gamma correction basically refers to the ability to correct for differences in how computers (and especially computer monitors) interpret color values." There are two factors here: the ability to predict what an image, say a photograph, will look like on another monitor; and the ability to match the colours from different sources on a single page.
The early browsers for the Web were predominantly aimed at retrieval of textual information. Whilst Tim Berners-Lee's original browser for the NeXT computer allowed images to be viewed, they appeared in a separate window and were not an integral part of the Web page. The <img> tag was introduced by Marc Andreessen in the Mosaic browser in 1993 and this provided a way of adding raster images to Web pages. In 1994 Dave Raggett developed an X-browser that allowed text to flow around images and tables. Images then became a firmly established component
Authoring a web page for any specific type of user agent or system configuration should never be a completely separate subject with arcane new techniques developed for each special need, but rather an application of the common set of Universally Accessible Design principles that should be part of every web author's repertoire.
With few exceptions, pages should never be designed "for" certain types (or brands) of browsers, but should instead be designed for all uses (and potential uses) of the information. All web documents should be equally