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hard to read
editit's very difficult to read example source code in this page because it is aligned at center. I'm not able to fix it, could some do that? thank you, Lorenzo, Italy
-- Classicfilms 2 July 2006
"It ran under the first web browser to run under X-Windows" => " It was the first web browser to run under X-Windows" ? —
- Yes, absolutely. Be bold and fix it :-) Good luck, Gwernol 01:29, 2 July 2006 (UTC)
How to pronounce ViolaWWW correctly? 85.207.166.104 22:30, 8 January 2007 (UTC)
http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/voila and http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/w http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/w http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/w xD --83.28.213.19 15:15, 15 April 2007 (UTC)
- You probably mean viola! --BlackTerror 16:54, 27 April 2007 (UTC)
Month irrelevant?
editHomepage: "around April 1992" W3C: "May ?, 1992", without "around" for the month. Because here it's not "fi."? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 177.4.62.112 (talk) 03:18, 20 August 2012 (UTC)
- Lol, guess I've made a slave who obeys me... — Preceding unsigned comment added by 201.41.10.227 (talk) 20:31, 26 August 2012 (UTC)
Popularity
editCompare with LineMode. France. Nicola did a good work apparently (courtesy of California). Sunet register not available regarding Erwise.
Fair use rationale for Image:ViolaWWW.png
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BetacommandBot (talk) 02:48, 12 February 2008 (UTC)
File:ViolaWWW plotDemo.gif Nominated for speedy Deletion
edit
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Quoting from the article -
"ViolaWWW was based on the Viola toolkit, which is a tool for the development and support of visual interactive media applications, with a multimedia web browser being a possible application. Viola ran under the X Window System and could be used to build complex hypermedia applications that were beyond HTML 3.0 (the latest version of HTML at that time), with features like applets and other interactive content as early as 1992.[7]"
What is this talking about!? HTML 3.0 came about long after Viola was dead. Are they saying the X Window System allowed more complex stuff than HTML 3.0 did? Yes that's true I suppose but only really relevant to people in the early '90s, on an X system, who wants to compare the few web browsers available at the time.
I think "at the time" is relative to the source link, an article written around 2000. Again, what the hell does that have to do with anything now? There's a lot of really irrelevant stuff in this article, and the way it's spread about and unorganised, makes it reading it a really bizarre experience!
In years gone by, it might've been worth taking a "then and now" approach to an historical web browser. But now, in 2017, Viola is completely antediluvian, and I don't think there's much chance of it coming back. So I think this article needs re-doing. Focusing on Viola as an obsolete piece of software, of strong historical interest. Mostly focussing on how it fit in with the world, the WWW, computers, the Internet, and other browsers at the time. There's a lot of early WWW stuff to write about, so I'd restrict this article to directly Viola related stuff.
Certainly it's important enough historically to need recording in this encyclopaedia. And also enough to deserve a proper write. A tidy-up would help, anyone could try and get the timeline in order. But for someone with the proper research and knowledge, it would be great to give it a major re-write. It needn't be a long article.
94.197.120.98 (talk) 20:15, 3 June 2017 (UTC)
Article in bad shape
editQuoting from the article -
"ViolaWWW was based on the Viola toolkit, which is a tool for the development and support of visual interactive media applications, with a multimedia web browser being a possible application. Viola ran under the X Window System and could be used to build complex hypermedia applications that were beyond HTML 3.0 (the latest version of HTML at that time), with features like applets and other interactive content as early as 1992.[7]"
What is this talking about!? HTML 3.0 came about long after Viola was dead. Are they saying the X Window System allowed more complex stuff than HTML 3.0 did? Yes that's true I suppose but only really relevant to people in the early '90s, on an X system, who wants to compare the few web browsers available at the time.
I think "at the time" is relative to the source link, an article written around 2000. Again, what the hell does that have to do with anything now? There's a lot of really irrelevant stuff in this article, and the way it's spread about and unorganised, makes it reading it a really bizarre experience!
In years gone by, it might've been worth taking a "then and now" approach to an historical web browser. But now, in 2017, Viola is completely antediluvian, and I don't think there's much chance of it coming back. So I think this article needs re-doing. Focusing on Viola as an obsolete piece of software, of strong historical interest. Mostly focussing on how it fit in with the world, the WWW, computers, the Internet, and other browsers at the time. There's a lot of early WWW stuff to write about, so I'd restrict this article to directly Viola related stuff.
Certainly it's important enough historically to need recording in this encyclopaedia. And also enough to deserve a proper write. A tidy-up would help, anyone could try and get the timeline in order. But for someone with the proper research and knowledge, it would be great to give it a major re-write. It needn't be a long article.
94.197.120.98 (talk) 20:16, 3 June 2017 (UTC)
- This Viola Overview page explains that the Viola engine (that supported the ViolaWWW browser application, among others) was still being updated at least as recently as 1994, and discusses the HTML 3.0 features that it supported in the early-mid 1990s. Jim Grisham (talk) 22:50, 25 July 2022 (UTC)