Web Server Software - Web Server, Comparison of Web Server Software, IBM Websphere Application Server, Internet Information Services (Paperback)


Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 42. Chapters: Adobe Atmosphere, Adobe JRun, C10k problem, CGIProxy, Cherokee (web server), CL-HTTP, Comparison of lightweight web servers, Comparison of web server software, Eagle (Mainframe Application Server), Elemenope, Embedded HTTP server, Helicon Ape, IBM HTTP Server, IBM Lotus Domino, IBM OD390, IBM WebSphere Application Server, IBM WebSphere Application Server Community Edition, In-kernel web server, Internet Information Services, Jaminid, Kerio WebSTAR, LAMP (software bundle), Lotus Foundations, MacHTTP, Microsoft Personal Web Server, Mod deflate, Mod gzip, Mod proxy, Mod ssl, Mod wsgi, NCSA HTTPd, NetDynamics Application Server, NetPresenz, Netscape Application Server, Netscape Enterprise Server, Oracle Application Server, Oracle HTTP Server, Oracle iPlanet Web Server, Oracle WebLogic Server, Orion Application Server, PHP-FPM, PoorMan, Run BASIC, SAP NetWeaver Application Server, Server-side redirect, Server2Go, WAMP, WebLogic (company), WebSitePro, WIMP (software bundle), WISA software bundle, Wt (web toolkit), Zend Server, Zeus Web Server. Excerpt: Adobe Atmosphere (informally abbreviated Atmo) was a software platform for interacting with 3D computer graphics. 3D models created with the commercial program could be explored socially using a browser plugin available free of charge. Atmosphere was originally developed by Attitude Software as 3D Anarchy and was later bought by Adobe Systems. The product spent the majority of its lifetime in beta testing. Adobe released the last version of Atmosphere, version 1.0 build 216, in February 2004, then discontinued the software in December that year. In Adobe's Atmosphere Museum of Art, each gallery was connected via a system of colorful "portals."Atmosphere focused on explorable "worlds" (later officially called "environments"), which were linked together by "portals," analogous to the World Wide Web's hyperlinks. These portals were represented as spinning squares of red, green, and blue that revolved around each other and floated above the ground. Portals were indicative of the Atmosphere team's desire to mirror the functionality of Web pages. Although the world itself was described in the .aer (or .atmo) file, images and sounds were kept separately, usually in the GIF, WAV or MP3 format. Objects in worlds were scriptable using a specialized dialect of JavaScript, allowing a more immersive environment, and worlds could be generated dynamically using PHP. Using JavaScript, a world author could link an object to a Web page, so that a user could, for example, launch a Web page by clicking on a billboard advertisement (Ctrl+Shift+Click in earlier versions). By version 1.0, Atmosphere also boasted support for using Macromedia Flash animations and Windows Media Video as textures. Atmosphere-based worlds consisted mainly of parametric primitives, such as floors, walls, and cones. These primitives could be painted a solid color, given an image-based texture, or made "subtractive." Invisible, "subtractive" primitives could be used to cut "holes" in other primitives, to build mo

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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 42. Chapters: Adobe Atmosphere, Adobe JRun, C10k problem, CGIProxy, Cherokee (web server), CL-HTTP, Comparison of lightweight web servers, Comparison of web server software, Eagle (Mainframe Application Server), Elemenope, Embedded HTTP server, Helicon Ape, IBM HTTP Server, IBM Lotus Domino, IBM OD390, IBM WebSphere Application Server, IBM WebSphere Application Server Community Edition, In-kernel web server, Internet Information Services, Jaminid, Kerio WebSTAR, LAMP (software bundle), Lotus Foundations, MacHTTP, Microsoft Personal Web Server, Mod deflate, Mod gzip, Mod proxy, Mod ssl, Mod wsgi, NCSA HTTPd, NetDynamics Application Server, NetPresenz, Netscape Application Server, Netscape Enterprise Server, Oracle Application Server, Oracle HTTP Server, Oracle iPlanet Web Server, Oracle WebLogic Server, Orion Application Server, PHP-FPM, PoorMan, Run BASIC, SAP NetWeaver Application Server, Server-side redirect, Server2Go, WAMP, WebLogic (company), WebSitePro, WIMP (software bundle), WISA software bundle, Wt (web toolkit), Zend Server, Zeus Web Server. Excerpt: Adobe Atmosphere (informally abbreviated Atmo) was a software platform for interacting with 3D computer graphics. 3D models created with the commercial program could be explored socially using a browser plugin available free of charge. Atmosphere was originally developed by Attitude Software as 3D Anarchy and was later bought by Adobe Systems. The product spent the majority of its lifetime in beta testing. Adobe released the last version of Atmosphere, version 1.0 build 216, in February 2004, then discontinued the software in December that year. In Adobe's Atmosphere Museum of Art, each gallery was connected via a system of colorful "portals."Atmosphere focused on explorable "worlds" (later officially called "environments"), which were linked together by "portals," analogous to the World Wide Web's hyperlinks. These portals were represented as spinning squares of red, green, and blue that revolved around each other and floated above the ground. Portals were indicative of the Atmosphere team's desire to mirror the functionality of Web pages. Although the world itself was described in the .aer (or .atmo) file, images and sounds were kept separately, usually in the GIF, WAV or MP3 format. Objects in worlds were scriptable using a specialized dialect of JavaScript, allowing a more immersive environment, and worlds could be generated dynamically using PHP. Using JavaScript, a world author could link an object to a Web page, so that a user could, for example, launch a Web page by clicking on a billboard advertisement (Ctrl+Shift+Click in earlier versions). By version 1.0, Atmosphere also boasted support for using Macromedia Flash animations and Windows Media Video as textures. Atmosphere-based worlds consisted mainly of parametric primitives, such as floors, walls, and cones. These primitives could be painted a solid color, given an image-based texture, or made "subtractive." Invisible, "subtractive" primitives could be used to cut "holes" in other primitives, to build mo

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Product Details

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Imprint

Booksllc.Net

Country of origin

United States

Release date

May 2013

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First published

May 2013

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,

Dimensions

246 x 189 x 2mm (L x W x T)

Format

Paperback - Trade

Pages

28

ISBN-13

978-1-157-67117-6

Barcode

9781157671176

Categories

LSN

1-157-67117-9



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