The entire audience, who had not really being paying much attention up to this point, went Aaaah! The web as we know it today, with all its interactivity, was born. He moved the cursor over a colour 3D molecule image in the browser, clicked on it, and rotated the molecule back and forth. James Gosling went with John to handle the demo. This included new technology that would, “bring the static Web to life”. The demonstration he planned was of a new web browser called WebRunner (the name being derived from Blade Runner). In early 1995, John Gage, Director of Sun Microsystems’ Science Office was heading to Monterey to do a presentation at the TED conference. If you go all the way back to when Java was being developed, it was an Applet that caught everyone’s attention. I recently noticed that Applets are now, to use a Monty Python analogy, the Norwegian Blue of client-side development.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |