![]() ![]() I’m far from the only person with experiences like these. The ability to “View Source” like that was revolutionary, and also allowed me to build some early fun projects, like a Cookie Clicker “AI” that could play the game automatically by calling the functions I could see in the game’s source. When I got back into it later, one thing that made a huge difference was being able to see how various cool JS sites were built. ![]() This made it difficult for me to figure out how people made certain things, and after a while I lost interest in programming. When I was a kid, every piece of software I used was pre-compiled, and therefore opaque. ![]() Sure “everyday users” aren’t clicking “View Source”, but that’s not really what the issue is about. Follow the alpha geeks this currently long phase will not be forever. We can assess demamd only after there is a visualizable state people can imagine just having an isolated blog is not the equivalent to the well connected social media site, but these capabilities slowly arise. Social media has had huge huge investmemt poured into it, but we are in decent preteen years of growing up & owning the libre equivalents. We're only a couple years into ActivityPub as an interchange format & growing many of the caoabilities & tools & systems, around all mimds of use cases, that will make throwong together a fair, interactabke competitive offering possoble. We havent had good ways to run online systems ourselves, versus hosted for us, and there's still lightyears to go but we're doing good things & finally maturing well. I wouldnt rush to make any conclusions about who or what has won, as a settled fact & case for all time. It's a simpler user experience, but a push away from notepad.exe webdev. If anything it's pushing in the opposite direction: rather than a transparent approachable web medium, it suggests we need hyperadvanced tools that we really wont understand or have control over to synthesize web code. Existing concerns about bundling might be met by bundled http exchamges (webpackage). Folks like Github & Youtube have very simple bottom-up webcomponent systems they use, rather than top doen frameworks. PHP used to stand for "Personal Home Page" and, as one of its founders put it, was created so that "any idtiot" could make an interactive site.īuild from scratch is out of favor, but not necessarily that far off. It'll be a lot tougher to just fork the code and do something more creative with it. That said, even though there will be plenty of OSS wasm tech, it'll still be more opaque to those of us who don't do compiled languages. To me the amazing thing is that browsers will still work with the methods described above but we're on the cusp of being able to do almost everything a full application environment can do. It's easy to miss all the potential of wasm when that's what you remember of the web. After some studying and trial and error they could even build an interactive site. Anybody could study a little html, download an ftp manager, jump through a few procedural hoops and have a web page. I don't think they're talking about every day users of the web either, but rather nascent developers. Note: Activate the module first if it is not appearing in the left menu.They didn't suggest the web is doomed, just that more aspects of it are opaque. The Jitsi Meet module can be freely previewed in the online demonstration of RosarioSIS. Go to School > Configuration > Modules and click “Activate”. DownloadĬopy the Jitsi_Meet/ folder (if named Jitsi_Meet-master, rename it) and its content inside the modules/ folder of RosarioSIS. Translated in French, Spanish and Portuguese (Brazil). ![]() However, if you want to use your own hosted installation of Jitsi Meet, you can configure the corresponding domain via the “Configuration” program. There are other community-run instances you can use. The module uses by default the free service which is maintained by Framasoft. Customize all the parameters supported by the Jitsi Meet API.Automatic customization of the room’s subject and the name/avatar of the participants.A room where all participants can meet each other.This RosarioSIS module uses Jitsi Meet to allow students and users (admin, teachers, or parents) to participate into virtual conference rooms with video and audio capabilities. ![]()
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