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Книга: Web Development Software: Adobe Flash, Microsoft Silverlight, Coldfusion, Adobe Atmosphere, Emml, Google Web Toolkit, Softwell Maker, Fusebox

Товар № 10213778
Вес: 0.370 кг.
Год издания: 2010
Страниц: 248 Переплет: Мягкая обложка
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Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher's book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: Adobe Flash, Microsoft Silverlight, Coldfusion, Adobe Atmosphere, Emml, Google Web Toolkit, Softwell Maker, Fusebox, Ontap, Adobe Dreamweaver, Adobe Shockwave, Lamp, Open Mashup Alliance, Comparison of Wamps, Base One Foundation Component Library, Pyjamas, Website Builder, Manydesigns Portofino, Jackbe, Iweb, Express Animator, Omnis Studio, Question Writer, Bedita, Sitegrinder, Colayer, Microsoft Popfly, Toufee, Prolifics Open Source Software for Linux, Asp.net Web Matrix, Html-Kit, Bluefish, Wt - Web Toolkit, Rapidweaver, Zyweb, Smx, Moonfruit, Panther, Um.sitemaker, Freeway, Skedit, M-Power, Swish Max, Mamp, Sharedcopy, Cooliris, List of Amp Packages, the Uniform Server, Google Closure Tools, Wamp, Webdev, Firstpage, Mediator, Websiphon, Convex Software Library, Tth, Latex2html, Silkpage. 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.Features 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 indicativ...

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