Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_web_browsers

 

Year Web Browsers Internet
Users (in millions)
1991 WorldWideWeb  
1992 ViolaWWW, Erwise, MidasWWW, MacWWW  
1993 Mosaic, Cello, Lynx 2.0, Arena, AMosaic 1.0  
1994 IBM WebExplorer, Netscape Navigator, SlipKnot 1.0, MacWeb, IBrowse, Argo, Minuet  
1995 Internet Explorer 1, Netscape Navigator 2.0, OmniWeb, UdiWWW, WebRouser, Internet Explorer 2, Grail 16
1996 Arachne 1.0, Internet Explorer 3.0, Netscape Navigator 3.0, Opera 2.0, PowerBrowser 1.5, Cyberdog, Amaya 0.9, AWeb, Voyager 36
1997 Internet Explorer 4.0, Netscape Navigator 4.0, Netscape Communicator 4.0, Opera 3.0, Amaya 1.0 70
1998 Internet Explorer 5.0 Beta 1, iCab, Mozilla 147
1999 Amaya 2.0, Mozilla M3, Internet Explorer 5.0 248
2000 Konqueror, Netscape 6, Opera 4, Opera 5, K-Meleon 0.2, Amaya 3.0, Amaya 4.0 361
2001 Internet Explorer 6, Galeon 1.0, Opera 6, Amaya 5.0 513
2002 Netscape 7, Mozilla 1.0, Phoenix 0.1, Links 2.0, Amaya 6.0, Amaya 7.0 587
2003 Opera 7, Safari 1.0, Epiphany 1.0, Amaya 8.0 719
2004 Firefox 1.0, Netscape Browser, OmniWeb 5.0 817
2005 Safari 2.0, Netscape Browser 8.0, Opera 8., Epiphany1.8, Amaya 9.0, AOL Explorer1.0, Maxthon 1.0, Shiira 1.0 1018
2006 SeaMonkey 1.0, K-Meleon 1.0, Galeon 2.0, Camino 1.0, Firefox 2.0, Avant 11, iCab 3, Opera 9, Internet Explorer 7, Sputnik 1093
2007 Maxthon 2.0, Netscape Navigator 9, NetSurf 1.0, Flock 1.0, Safari 3.0, Conkeror 1262
2008 Konqueror 4, Safari 3.1, Opera 9.5, Firefox 3, Amaya 10.0, Flock 2, Chrome 1, Amaya 11.0 1565
2009 Internet Explorer 8, Chrome 2, Safari 4, Opera 10, Chrome 3, SeaMonkey 2, Camino 2, Firefox 3.5 1734
2010 Firefox 3.6, Chrome 4, Opera 10.50  


  1. The concept - typically drawings, words, models, code and basic prototypes that describe the nature, objectives and features of the website.
  2. Design document - a detailed plan of the website’s features and how it will display are generated from the concept and presented to potential publishers.
  3. Technology demo – a prototype that demonstrates the website’s technology, illustrating for example the presentation and registration services. This is produced for review so as to decide if concept is marketable.
  4. Browsable prototype or Vertical slice – normally a few sections of the website are produced with many of the website features in and working, this allows reviewers to get a feel for the site, the level of usability, the saleability of the product and technical risk involved in fully developing the website.
  5. ALPHA/BETA – these are the next major milestones that represent near completed websites, these are subject to extensive testing, compatibility and QA by both the developer and the publisher.
  6. Master – a completed, bug-free website approved by the customer and available online.

This is if  you have an FLV file and you don't want any fancy management system, you just want your FLV to play on your webpage.

The following example is a demonstration of how to do this without installing anything on your webserver.

 I like to use flowplayer for this example but my own systems can't use a solution as crude as this.

  1. Copy the below code (beginning and ending with object tags)
  2. Paste it into your HTML page
  3. Replace both instances of the text "http://my.video.com/myVideo.flv" with the full url of your own FLV.
  4. Save the HTML page and publish

The Code:


I could apply the PRINCE2 (Projects in a controlled environment) methodology to website projects  but most people find this overwhelming.  It's in business techno babble and I get asked what does this mean in stage 1?  And this in stage 2?  (There are over 100 stages)...  

Below is my template project initiation plan (project mandate?) for my freelance website development process.  It may look clean, clear, obvious... it's just an outline of what I picture as a perfect project; unfortunately the first 2 pages tend to be completed in just over a day and the rest of the time is spent faffing around with design and functionality. We use the ProjectFork extension to manage projects, it helps during times when we can't see face-to-face with colleagues or clients.


I've decided to put something in here as it took me an age to find out how I could do it.

This is when using a MySQL query within a PHP script.  The process is used often to do a statistics table or top ten chart of your data (eg. movies, music, etc).

My aim is to do the following:

  1. retrieve data from a table,
  2. count the number of times each data exists,
  3. sort it in reverse order so that the most frequent is at the top of the list
  4. print out each row with the number of times that particular data appeared in a row

My old method was to:


 I'm beginning a list as I've just spent an age trying to get PHP output to create a text file.  Then my client showed me how she then opens the text file in Excel, so I said we could get the script to do that instead.

PHP to TXT

copyraw
header('Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8');
header('Content-Disposition: attachment; filename=foo.txt');
echo 'contents of file';
  1.  header('Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8')
  2.  header('Content-Disposition: attachment; filename=foo.txt')
  3.  echo 'contents of file'

 

PHP to XLS

copyraw
$export_file = "my_name.xls"; 
ob_end_clean(); 
ini_set('zlib.output_compression','Off'); 
header('Pragma: public'); 
header("Expires: Sat, 26 Jul 1997 05:00:00 GMT"); 
header('Last-Modified: '.gmdate('D, d M Y H:i:s') . ' GMT'); 
header('Cache-Control: no-store, no-cache, must-revalidate');
header('Cache-Control: pre-check=0, post-check=0, max-age=0');
header ("Pragma: no-cache"); 
header("Expires: 0"); 
header('Content-Transfer-Encoding: none'); 
header('Content-Type: application/vnd.ms-excel;'); 
header("Content-type: application/x-msexcel");  
header('Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="'.basename($export_file).'"');
  1.  $export_file = "my_name.xls"; 
  2.  ob_end_clean()
  3.  ini_set('zlib.output_compression','Off')
  4.  header('Pragma: public')
  5.  header("Expires: Sat, 26 Jul 1997 05:00:00 GMT")
  6.  header('Last-Modified: '.gmdate('D, d M Y H:i:s') . ' GMT')
  7.  header('Cache-Control: no-store, no-cache, must-revalidate')
  8.  header('Cache-Control: pre-check=0, post-check=0, max-age=0')
  9.  header ("Pragma: no-cache")
  10.  header("Expires: 0")
  11.  header('Content-Transfer-Encoding: none')
  12.  header('Content-Type: application/vnd.ms-excel;')
  13.  header("Content-type: application/x-msexcel")
  14.  header('Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="'.basename($export_file).'"')
Category: Personal Home Page :: Article: 240

The Error: This file contains HTML or script code that may be erroneously interpreted by a web browser

This is a common error when uploading files that the MediaWiki system does not allow.  By making some minor changes to the MediaWiki LocalSettings.php file, we can fix this.

For demo purposes, I'm going to make our system recognize SWF files (by default these are disallowed):


The Issue

If you've ever made PHP scripts to process data within a LAMP environment (Linux, Apache, MySQL, PHP) then this happens a lot.  In the following example, our HTML form will allow the user to specify a date (so excludes hours, minutes and seconds).  For demonstration purposes, I'm going to be using the European date format so DD/MM/YYYY.

The Solution

The Issue

Basically you have a HTML form with an input field type of 'FILE' (ie. <input type="file" name="file_to_upload" />) and want a PHP file to process this.  This example applies to a Linux Apache MySQL PHP (LAMP) environment.

 

The Solution
1.  The first thing to do is check that your HTML form is setup to do this:

The Issue

You have a PHP page which generates a HTML form.  When the user submits the form, you want the same PHP page to process the data.

Solution

I've seen a lot of people write CGI requests but if you left the action attribute blank, this would do the same thing:

 

copyraw
<form method="post" action="">
...
  1.  <form method="post" action=""> 
  2.  ... 

 

Category: Hypertext Markup Language :: Article: 179

Credit where Credit is Due:


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Joel Lipman
www.joellipman.com

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