November 18, 2010
Google's Guide to the Web
Google Chrome's comic book was a great way to introduce to the world a new browser, but not everyone knew what's an URL or a web app. "20 Things I Learned About Browsers and the Web" is a guidebook created by the Google Chrome team that tries to address this issue by explaining complicated terms like "Internet", "cloud computing", "JavaScript", "HTML5", "cookies", "URL", "IP address" using illustrations and real life analogies. Here's an example:
"An IP address is a series of numbers that tells us where a particular device is on the Internet network, be it the google.com server or your computer. It's a bit like mom's phone number: just as the phone number tells an operator which house to route a call to so it reaches your mom, an IP address tells your computer which other device on the Internet to communicate with — to send data to and get data from."
The guidebook is actually a great example of an HTML5 web application that works offline and Google recommends to read it in "Chrome or any up-to-date, HTML5-compliant modern browser". Most of the examples from the book are about Google Chrome and that's what makes it look like a Chrome ad.
"An IP address is a series of numbers that tells us where a particular device is on the Internet network, be it the google.com server or your computer. It's a bit like mom's phone number: just as the phone number tells an operator which house to route a call to so it reaches your mom, an IP address tells your computer which other device on the Internet to communicate with — to send data to and get data from."
The guidebook is actually a great example of an HTML5 web application that works offline and Google recommends to read it in "Chrome or any up-to-date, HTML5-compliant modern browser". Most of the examples from the book are about Google Chrome and that's what makes it look like a Chrome ad.
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10 comments:
TL;DR
Reply DeleteIronically, I couldn't open the site in Chrome unless I went to incognito mode--it must have clashed with one of my extensions!
Reply Deleteits good post , its about operating system, i like this post for operating post.
Reply Deletenetwork support los angeles
What CMS are they using
Reply Deletethats a cool web, and veri usefully...
Reply Deletethanks a lot
The html5 stuff doesn't seem to work well on the iPad, though. That's a bit disappointing.
Reply DeleteThis HTML5 book doesn't seem to work for me. I tried Chrome, Opera, and Firefox 4 beta. What is going on?!?
Reply DeleteVery nice and useful. What kind of framework did they use?
Reply DeleteOkay google co-op'ed with FI. No public frmaework :-( http://goo.gl/24TB
Reply DeleteGreat Work by Chrome Team.You have explained complex terms in great way and great preview of HTML5 capabilities.
Reply DeleteNote: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.
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