eleven years ago, and today

Original link: https://blog.heysh.xyz/2013/05/10/%E5%8D%81%E4%B8%80%E5%B9%B4%E5%89%8D%EF%BC%8C% E4%BB%A5%E5%8F%8A%E4%BB%8A%E5%A4%A9/

When I was hanging about on the Internet today, I found this :

In the position of h1, Posted July 2002 is written with great fanfare in the p tag, which is completely in the style of 2002: table typesetting, embedded font, and comic sans that everyone likes ; looking at the head again, it looks like this :

 < meta content = "text/html; charset=windows-1252" http-equiv = "Content-Type" > < meta content = "Microsoft FrontPage 6.0" name = "GENERATOR" > < meta content = "FrontPage.Editor.Document" name = "ProgId" > < meta content = "no" http-equiv = "imagetoolbar" > < title >Fireworks</ title > < meta content = "none, default" name = "Microsoft Border" >

see it? Dead FrontPage…

However, after opening java, this webpage looks like this:\

fireworks

Now it’s time to find the difference: Please find the difference between this and this .

The only difference is that it’s 11 years earlier.

Of course, what kind of flat design style is popular now, java applets have also been squeezed out of the browser by flash; and now flash has gradually shown its decline after changing owners n times.

Now is the era of HTML5! they said.

So, we replaced the ancient java with the advanced HTML5, and then found that the fans were spinning wildly.

When we threw frontpage into the grave with joy, we would never think of today’s adobe muse.

Eleven years after we enshrined the “Three Musketeers” as an artifact, Flash is half dead, and the real Fireworks has just swallowed his last breath.

Will the new technology we are touting today live another eleven years? Will what we despise today become the fad of tomorrow?

Maybe, I should learn the C language of the last century?

and

This webpage is still being updated until 10 years ago. Where will I be in eight years? This blog will definitely be wiped out, and it will disappear with a certain cleanup. Perhaps it can be found at archive.org?

And And And And

Facts have proved that I was still too optimistic. There is no such page on the archive at all.

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