Submitted via IRC for TheMightyBuzzard
Only 4.9 percent of today's websites utilize Flash code, a number that has plummeted from a 28.5 percent market share recorded at the start of 2011.
The number, courtesy of web technology survey site W3Techs, confirms Flash's decline, and a reason why Adobe has decided to retire the technology at the end of 2020.
[...] On the client side, browser makers are expected to remove Flash support from their products altogether by the end of 2020 —Flash's end-of-life date.
2020 can't come soon enough.
(Score: 2) by MichaelDavidCrawford on Saturday April 21 2018, @03:31PM (2 children)
Example:
http://soggy.jobs/computer/united-states/washington/king/seattle/ [soggy.jobs]
This would be easy to do in HTML with a web application but I've been building the site by hand
http://soggy.jobs/js/tiger-stripe.js [soggy.jobs]
And yes "tiger stripe" is the correct term for this
Yes I Have No Bananas. [gofundme.com]
(Score: 4, Interesting) by JNCF on Saturday April 21 2018, @04:24PM
CSS selectors can handle that now. [w3schools.com] Another option would be making your site in some programming language and writing the html to a text file that you host, so that your code doesn't have to execute before rendering properly. I do sometimes argue for JavaScript, but I'm not convinced by this use case.
(Score: 3, Informative) by The Mighty Buzzard on Saturday April 21 2018, @04:25PM
Dude... That's not any more difficult to do server side in whatever source language you're using to generate the pages. And it effectively makes that algorithm that would have more or less been run O(1) times per page (memory or web caching) into one that's run O(N) times, though not on your server. That wastes power and makes your page unfriendly to users with javascript turned off.
My rights don't end where your fear begins.