Client side scripting enables the local client computer to perform parts of the processing required by a web application. Javascript is a client-side part of the magic sauce that makes AJAX apps so fluid and useful. This works, of course, but why do we need separate client side and server side technologies? The HyperText...
Read More »
Posts Tagged ‘ HyperText Computer ’
The HyperText Computer and Client Side Scripting
The HyperText Computer, Microsoft and Google
A couple of days ago, John Milan in his “Changing Climates for Microsoft and Google, Desktops and Webs” post on Read Write Web, explored the balance of local verses remote processing and storage and the battle between Microsoft and Google. Earlier today my post was on just this topic: The HyperText Computer and Rich...
Read More »
The HyperText Computer and Rich Internet Applications
The HyperText Computer may provide an alternative to the need for special technologies created just for Rich Internet Applications. The HyperText Computer (HTC) is a computer built on the HyperText Transport Protocol (HTTP). In a HTC, every operation is implemented by a HTTP request and all information is accessed via document URLs. Rich Internet...
Read More »
The Hypertext Computer
The HyperText Computer (HTC) is proposed as a model computer. Built on the HyperText Transport Protocol (HTTP), the HTC is a general purpose computer. In its basic instruction set, every operator is implemented by a HTTP request and every operand is a URL referring to a document. The HTC is a foundational model for...
Read More »


