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The of Web Design(History)


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History of WWW
                      The first website in the world was hosted on a NeXT computer at CERN in {a laboratory|a research laboratory|a research} in the Swiss Alps. It described what the {Internet|World-wide-web|The net} Project was all about, how to gain access to it, what to use, how to further develop it and so on. It was designed - or rather programmed - by Tim Berners-Lee, the inventor of the {Globe|Universe|Community} Wide Web himself. {Setting up|Construction} {after} the idea of the internet as a whole, Berners-Lee {created|developed|came across} the concept of {by using a} system of interlinked hypertext protocols to transfer an {consumer|customer|end user} from document to {record|file|doc} and so navigate the internet. He {and the lads|and his guys} developed the original Hypertext Copy Protocol (HTTP) as well as a language in which documents could be written, called HTML. {Additionally they|In addition they|Additionally, they} developed the first {internet browser|web browser} -- a program {able|in a position|competent} of reading HTML and basically 'browsing' the various documents.

                      Without having into a philosophical debate, web design evolved from {mayhem|damage|turmoil} created by many {thoughts|heads|brains}. There was a certain design curve if you will. It {started out|commenced} simple, with basic colors and layouts. Berners-Lee's WWW site didn't have more than text and a few links. {Other|The majority of|Almost every other} sites that followed kept it simple as well. But soon simplicity went overboard with images, music, silly results and slow bandwidth. {Points|Items|Issues} took momentarily {a change|a switch|a convert} for the worse when Adobe Flash came along. Although it could make a visitor's site {conversation|connection|discussion} interesting, it weighed down heavily on bandwidth and a user's time. Yahoo changed all of that when it banked {on the|over a} heavy reliance on powerful text to index sites. Suddenly it became {essential} for a site to have text and information as opposed to {complicated|feel like|cool} intros and beeping {selections|choices|food selection} {to be able|as a way} to garner {get ranking|ranking|list} {in the major search engines|well in the serps}. New languages {arrived|emerged|came up} along such as PHP, AJAX, jQuery and others to help keep up with {the necessity|the need} for {directories|sources|data source} and text-based sites. {In spite of|Inspite of|Irrespective of} fast internet available worldwide - and according to Google soon via {go up|as well as the} - the established current style is minimalist. {Info|Details|Data} needs to be accessible quickly and easily without too much clutter. {Pictures|Photos} need to speak their proverbial thousand words, while the words or {text messages|text messaging} need to be {succinct|to the point|exact} and interesting.
                        Adobe {Adobe flash can be used|Adobe flash is employed|Display can be used|Display is employed|Show can be used|Show is employed} sparingly. While a lot of links are good in an SEO context, it is interesting to note more and more sites return to {the fundamental|the essential|the standard} one-page scheme that only requires scrolling. This kind of may have to do with the fact that the web is {progressively|significantly|more and more} {employed by} tablets and {cell phones|mobile phones|telephones}: tapping on links can be frustrating while {moving is|rolling is} done with {an easy|a straightforward|a basic} flick of the {little finger|ring finger|quick}. The future looks simple where web design is concerned. A designer needs to meet the perfect balance between design and information for a site to be user-friendly. Text and articles are still a matter for indexing and ranking, but the more visual a site, the better for the business. Videos and {graphs|chart} help show {a traveler|a guests|an invitee} what they are looking for. And that is the crucial point: in the end, it comes down to {the actual|the particular} {traveler is|guests is|invitee is} looking for. {Therefore|Thus|Consequently} when making a site, give them what they want.