[Sigia-l] seeking rules
Heller, David
david.heller at documentum.com
Tue Apr 30 16:55:35 EDT 2002
Ziya, no one is saying that it is bad to follow this rule. Christina is
writing a book and wants examples of stuff that could be taken to an
extreme. There are definitely cases where everything on one page doesn't
work, such as it takes forever to download 10,000 results from a search
query in Google. Chunking it up in some units makes much more sense.
The whole point of the question was the acknowledgement of "it depends".
It's a good guideline, but it is just that.
-- dave
-----Original Message-----
From: Ziya Oz [mailto:ZiyaOz at earthlink.net]
Sent: Tuesday, April 30, 2002 1:51 PM
To: 'sigia-l at asis.org'
Subject: Re: [Sigia-l] seeking rules
"Anne Hjortshoj" wrote:
> Here's one: it's always more efficient to have everything on one page.
As a 'one-page' advocate I must disagree :-) Actually, if complete page
refreshes were not a problem with HTTP, it is often more efficient to have
everything on one page. Obviously there's a limit to this, but Apple's
standalone iApps (like iTunes) are reasonable examples that indicate
'one-page' apps are quite efficient.
Best,
Ziya
Content Management Symposium, Chicago O'Hare Marriott, June 28 - 30. See
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