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Revision as of 15:20, 15 January 2009
For this week
Reading
Reading for today's meeting is Ted Nelson's "Way out of the box".
You may wish to read this text aloud, soapbox optional. For added ambience, consider printing and then burning pictures of Tim Berners-Lee, Marc Andreessen, and Steve Jobs.
Technical Plan
The idea is to write your technical plan using only the tags possible in 1993-era HTML, as described here. Some tags, you may discover, have changed or have been deprecated (possibly still supported by browsers, but officially removed from formal recommendations for use, and thus discouraged to still use). The key tags, which are still valid to use, are:
- <title>
- Anchors (or Links), <a>
- Headings: <H1>, <H2>, <H3>, ...
- Definition Lists: <dl>, <dd>, <dt>
- Bullet Lists: <ul>, <li>
Note that the capitalization of tags doesn't matter (<p> or <P> are the same).
In addition, feel free to use <img> tags to include (inline) images of projects you may refer to. And make sure to LINK (with the <a> tag) any projects or other subjects you reference (e.g. if you refer to a project, make the name of the project a link to the project's main page).
Personal Achievements Checklist
The following are skills you should be able to demonstrate after today's class:
- Have installed and be able to use a Code/Text Editor that performs Syntax Coloring on HTML.
- Be able to move files from your computer to your Piet Zwart web space (or other public web space) using (S)FTP.
- Be able to "hand code" a simple page using tags.
- Understand the terms: URL, HTTP, HTML, tag, and attribute.
- Locate and/or install an Apache web server on your computer for "localhost" use.
- Enable a "personal" space on your localhost server (USERDIR).