Editing 949: File Transfer

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In contrast to this, a static web ("Web 1.0") came alive, which developed then later to the interactive "Web 2.0" we know today. Wikis like [[Main Page| this website]], where the page content is editable via forms, are a perfect example for this "emulated interactivity". From the technical point of view, the webpage is still static and the browser is just a viewer for html pages with the limited possibility to send some form data to the server. Scripts on the server, which process this form data, then change the web page. This mechanism is a more complicated work-around for what Tim Berners-Lee originally planned.
 
In contrast to this, a static web ("Web 1.0") came alive, which developed then later to the interactive "Web 2.0" we know today. Wikis like [[Main Page| this website]], where the page content is editable via forms, are a perfect example for this "emulated interactivity". From the technical point of view, the webpage is still static and the browser is just a viewer for html pages with the limited possibility to send some form data to the server. Scripts on the server, which process this form data, then change the web page. This mechanism is a more complicated work-around for what Tim Berners-Lee originally planned.
 
Dropbox and the web interfaces of email providers are further examples of this "emulated interactivity". The title text assumes, that Tim Berners-Lee feels probably generally sad, that his invention developed into this unnecessary complicated way and misusing emails (maybe even via the web interface of email providers) for file sharing is therefore especially painful for what could have been so simple.
 
Dropbox and the web interfaces of email providers are further examples of this "emulated interactivity". The title text assumes, that Tim Berners-Lee feels probably generally sad, that his invention developed into this unnecessary complicated way and misusing emails (maybe even via the web interface of email providers) for file sharing is therefore especially painful for what could have been so simple.
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This inability to use the internet for its intended purpose is why {{w|Tim Berners-Lee}}, the arguable inventor of the World Wide Web, sheds a tear: his creation cannot be appreciated by the masses it was intended for.
  
 
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