I have the feeling that flash-based ( or silverlight-based) websites are generally frowned upon, except when you are creating games or multimedia-content rich applications. Why this is so?
|
3
|
|||||
|
|
|
Flash is infamous for its poor accessibility. Keyboard navigation does not usually work, and flash (up until recently) did not have search engine support. Flash applications does not work in mobile phones and other portable devices. Flash is not there in the iPhone!!! Flash is controlled by a single company(Adobe) ad so it is not following any well defined standards for the internet. The beauty of internet lies in the fact that you can always view the source code of any website you are in. This way you can use the same programming/design techniques in your website or you can find security flaws in the web application. This is not possible in flash. In flash, source code is closed. The big question is, why should you use flash "except when you are creating games or multimedia-content rich applications"?
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
Hi, to name a few:
[Edit] Why I place usability and ease of use separate is best explained in this link
I agree with the comments on that site, but this is all debatable...could be a good stackoverflow question: is usability and ease of use the same? IMO part of usability is ease of use and vice versa, but they are not necessarily the same. I hope I don't enfuriate the more semantical sensitive with this edit :-) |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
Flash sucks and I refuse to visit Flash-based web sites. Why? Because I can't. Why? Because Adobe is too ignorant to write a plugin for a 64-bit browser. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
I think it's a matter of selecting lowest cost medium to reach your target audience, be it flash or sliverlight or javascript or plain text. You can have text-only, javascript-only etc versions of your site, if you have the money, and your target audience come with different prioritizes. so my Q to you would be : does your website has people who frown on flash as it's target audience ? if yes, you need to stay away from it. If not, use anything to give your visitors good experience. |
||
|
|
|
All the above answers are focusing on Flash, SilverLight is just as bad or worse. If you are running FireFox with noScripts (you should be) then you have to click on every script that you wish to allow to run. So build your websites with scripts, Flash and SilverLight, just make sure that they still work with them disabled. Many of us will simply move on when we open a site and see nothing. |
||||||||
|
|
|
Flash and Silverlight based sites typically go against basic Internet conventions with their closed models. For example, most Flash & Silverlight based sites:
|
||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
Flash adds another heavyweight component that's required to properly view a web page. The flash plugins are often buggy and can crash a browser. Flash pages often are used to make cutesy animations and other things that make it harder to quickly navigate a site. |
||||||||
|
|
|
In this next rant s/Flash/Flash or Silverlight/g
|
||||||||
|
|
|
SEO is the prime issue. Still Flash is not crawlable. But Adobe is working on it.http://www.adobe.com/devnet/flashplayer/articles/swf_searchability.html for better swf indexing. |
||||
|
|
|
"I was about to click checkout but I wanted to change something so I hit the back button" |
||||
|
|
|
Interestingly everyone here blasts Flash/Silverlight and you would do well to recognise that this is only one side of the coin. Flash (and Flex) allow web site designers significantly more flexibility and richer content for their site and this works in a variety of situations - e.g. sites relating to movies, or bands, sites for kids, sites for games etc. Certainly, there are many reasons to not choose Flash/Flex/Silverlight, but one can do sites just as inaccessible in Javascript these days. I have previously worked with Javascript products that have no reasonable usability by blind people, or web crawlers. Flash penetration (from a biased source to be sure) is 99%+ (http://www.adobe.com/products/player_census/flashplayer/version_penetration.html), which means that those that say "would never visit a flash site" are in the 1% of the population that do no install flash, do not watch youtube or movie trailers online. So, you need to be mindful of your audience. Certain audiences and situations would definitely be better off with plain HTML pages and minimum of javascript (government websites, programming websites are two areas that spring to mind). Other times it is because the audience are office workers that are not allowed to install Flash in the browsers. Rich Internet Applications (RIA) is one area where there is a distinct clash/struggle between the flex/silverlight and javascript/ccs/html sides. I've worked with both, and I'm now of the opinion that requiring flex/silverlight plugins is fairly reasonable, though can still lose some visitors if your app is public. In summary - you're best to identify your audience, identify what they're willing/able to use and then based on such limitations decide your technology. |
||
|
|
|
|
In it's defence, most of the issues raised here around about how people have implemented Flash in their websites, not about Flash itself. Flash does support accessibility it's just that most people don't consider it when building their sites. Flash does work on mobile phones - it's FlashLite, although the actionscript is limited in earlier versions. Why should anyone have an automatic right to view the source code of a website? A web author has spent time and effort dreaming up their code to share their ideas through the medium of the web - if you want to know how something works, why not put a bit of effort in yourself, and work it out? The beauty of the web is the message not the medium. So what if Flash is owned by a single company - Abode bought it for a reason, and that's because it's a fantastic bit of kit. The problem comes from web authors not using it properly, trying to make it do things it was never intended to, or simply not applying standards to their sites when developing using Flash. What is so evil about a flash-based website? Absoultely nothing. It's like asking what is so evil about a gun. Nothing. It's the idiot wielding it that has the problem. |
||
|
|
|
|
Let us not forget that FLASH allows web sites to display video, animation, user interaction et al, and it allows this to be a simple process or a geeky techy one, depending on what you want to do. Many bad flash sites are down to the author. If YOU don't like flash then the answer is simple, don't use it. Don't install the flash plug-in, or install a browser plug-in such as Flash Block on Firefox. This replaces any flash movie with a play button, preventing and download until it is clicked. Better than that though, if you don't like the solution that Adobe or Microsoft are giving you, then come up with a better one, or at least let them know what you don't like, they do take feedback seriously. Support some of the people who campaign for accessibility improvements in FLASH, for example visit http://niquimerret.com. Accessibility is an ongoing issue and not one that will go away, FLASH accessibility is improving for people with physical disabilities, in some cases the use of Flash enhances the experience for people with cognitive and learning disabilities, when an concept or idea is better explained when presented as an animation rather than a page of words and static images. |
||
|
|
|
|
Anybody know a site called YOUTUBE? woulnd't exist without flash. Flash has great video/multimedia capabilities that simply cannot be ignored. Flash is amazing when used in the proper way, in appropriate circumstances and when the designer/coder has taken care to embed basic accessibility features. The thing is, like all good things, there's a lot of abusive use (flashturbation). Especially in the beginning, when people just want to slap flash wherever they can just to show off. But I strongly disagree that flash sites are bad: When made properly, and with good UI design and accessibilty, they bring a whole new dimension to the web. |
||||||||||||||
|
|
|
All of the above is true for the wild wild web. However, for internal business applications, Flash and Silverlight allow the user to have something close to a fully-fledged application in their browser. Accessibility, SEO, and closed source are not very important in an internal application. All that matters is making the user's life easier. |
||
|
|
|
Flash has its uses. It's good for content, not webpages. |
||
|
|
|
|
I am a Flash developer. The firm I work for has no difficulty finding clients who want us to build Flash-based products for them. There is a certain set of applications which it is much easier to develop in Flash than in other environments I have used. But Flash has its problems. Some above have complained that Flash apps do not include keyboard support. Others say it is because the developers are too lazy to implement it. The truth is that many of the components that come standard with Flash are buggy. At my firm we have had to write our own replacements. One feature that is problematic is keyboard support. I implemented my own support for keyboard interaction. It works well, but required effort. If I were writing a Windows VB app, the keyboard navigation would be provided and would work well out of the box. The same is true for deep-linking, back-button support, etc. A clever developer will be able to make a Flash app behave well. Some open source libraries are indispensable here. As for flowing layouts, I just completed a proof-of-concept for this (in AS3) as well. It is possible, but requires much effort. Why do I make the effort? Because of the other things that Flash does well. |
||
|
|
|
|
Look at any major car maker's website, they are ALL in flash. It depends what you are doing. If your goal is to provide a rich, sexy website Flash/Silverlight will give you a huge advantage in terms of development time. IF you are providing content/data HTML+JavaScript (jQuery for example) can give you alot of whizbang without requiring additional software plugins (flash/silverlight). |
||
|
|
|
|
I am a flash developer.. and I have found that although flash requires more effort in coding, the potential is enormous. You can create very simple sites with simple transitions, so subtle it would seem to be a normal html page, while still being just as light. At the same time, you can use OOP with Actionscript to create a website that is as complex and as inclusive, as well as feels and acts like a desktop application. WHILE ALSO REMAINING VERY LIGHT! (only the content required is loaded on demand, as apposed to 4 column html sites with far too much information.) Nowadays, and this is still without migrating to AS3, but still using AS2, MY flash files contain simply 2 or 3 lines of actionscript, only one frame, and an empty stage. Everything else is dynamically created or added at runtime. Flash's problems are not about flash, but about lazy development. |
||
|
|
|
|
I dislike flash based websites because what happens if your browser crash or your connection dies for a bit? You have to load it again and go back to the menu, and select the item you wanted to read about, and so on and so forth. Just don't do it. :S |
||
|
|
|
|
Printing is often poorly supported and the backbutton does not work. |
||
|
|
|
Probably the same reason C programmers shied away from Win32 API, Win32 programmers from MFC and MFC programmers from WinForms - it's tricky to use and understand - I have tried programming in Flex and am getting along pretty well but it is not inherently designed for typical web application design e.g. there is no native (atleast till Flex 3) support for databases or cookies or sessions - you need to put all 3 in PHP or another server-side page and call that from actionScript Try making a simple register/login page with PHP and then again with Flex/Flash and you will see that all the server side crunching is done by someone else - again, this is probably by design since we have HTML/Javascript for the front-end mixed with ColdFusion or PHP etc. for backend in "traditional" Web apps Like started by other people, flash is bad with the keyboard - try pressing Ctrl-T in fireFox when a flash object embedded in an HTML page has focus (mouse-over) - so that can be frustrating for the user... Having said all that, I would still rather make a web app front-end in Flash/Flex than HTML/Javascript/CSS since the latter needs a sharp learning curve that gets quite bewildering after a while since you have to account for the "good" design aspects of CSS and Javascript and the bad ones too - and also the peccadilloes that Javascript/CSS inherently have and those which are introduced by the Javascript library vendor (Yahoo's YUI, Google's AJAX API, Scriptalicious etc. If you are already a web programmer who knows CSS/HTML/Javascript very well and have a good development environment set up on your PC with all required code inspectors and runtime debuggers etc. etc. then it's easy to keep on working in that (not taking into account end-user preferences) but if you are like me and want to make a web app ready and available for use quickly and want to add features to it quickly while making it pretty all the time, then Flash/Flex is a better option, IMHO |
||
|
|
|
|
My biggest gripe with Flash is that it takes you "out of the browser" into its own totally separate application. This breaks "browser standards" - i.e. the functions I can do in my browser:
|
||
|
|
|
|
I don't install Flash on my browsers, mainly to escape the nuisance of animated ads, but also for all the security and privacy reasons mentioned by others. So sites done completely in Flash are nonexistent as far as I'm concerned. (W.r.t. Youtube, I download videos directly into Miro.) |
||
|
|
