WebFund 2013W Lecture 3: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
|||
Line 11: | Line 11: | ||
# NPAPI and "Pepper" are standards for browser plug-ins. (true or false) | # NPAPI and "Pepper" are standards for browser plug-ins. (true or false) | ||
# AJAX potentially increases the performance of web servers by offloading computation onto clients. (true or false) | # AJAX potentially increases the performance of web servers by offloading computation onto clients. (true or false) | ||
==Questions to ponder== | |||
# What sort of applications are easy to implement as a web application? What are hard? | |||
# What is the history of the web technology stack? Which parts of this stack is more legacy at this point? Why? |
Revision as of 05:06, 15 January 2013
Questions to answer
Please answer these questions by midnight Wednesday (January 16, 2013) on cuLearn. (the cuLearn version will be up later tonight)
- What is the biggest constrain on the performance of web applications? (one word)
- What is the standard that allows web browseers to call external programs? (acronym)
- What HTTP command is normally used to request the contents of a page?
- HTTP cookies are only sent to a web server when explicitly requested. (true or false)
- Cookies are normally parsed by client-side JavaScript. (true or false)
- In modern browsers, Which is more of a security risk, browser plug-ins or browser extensions? (plug-ins or extensions)
- NPAPI and "Pepper" are standards for browser plug-ins. (true or false)
- AJAX potentially increases the performance of web servers by offloading computation onto clients. (true or false)
Questions to ponder
- What sort of applications are easy to implement as a web application? What are hard?
- What is the history of the web technology stack? Which parts of this stack is more legacy at this point? Why?