Get Started with
Mobile Web Design for the iPhone, iPad, and other DevicesIntroducing: The Art of Mobile Design
Mobile Trends: One Screen to Rule them All: How the iPad turns three screens into one.
Design Tutorial: Mobile Web Design Tips.
Mobile Blogging: Mobile WordPress themes convert blogs for the iPhone and other mobile devices.
Code Hints: How HTML5 and CSS 3 are Changing Web Design
Get Started with the New Site SetUp Process in Dreamweaver CS5
10 Quick Reasons to upgrade to Adobe Dreamweaver CS5
Use the Widget Browser to add slideshows, drop-down menus, and other features to Dreamweaver CS5
Use Adobe Dreamweaver CS5 to edit a WordPress blog post or theme
Editing CSS Layouts in Dreamweaver CS5
New CSS Features in Dreamweaver CS5 make it easier to test and design with Cascading Style Sheets
Test Your Web Pages in Adobe BrowserLab and other Web Browser Testing Services
New Language Support in Adobe Dreamweaver CS5: Spanish, Dutch, Russian, Turkish, and more...
Most of the tutorials in the sections below also apply to version CS4
Why use Cascading Style Sheets (CSS)?
CSS selectors in Dreamweaver CS4 / CS5: When to use Class, ID, Tag, or Compound selectors
CSS Selector Options in Dreamweaver CS3: Class, Tag, and Advanced selectors
Customize a CSS Layout in Dreamweaver
Create a Navigation Bar with an Unordered List and CSS
Where to learn advanced CSS tricks
Add a Shopping Cart and Traffic Counter Compare eCommerce Shopping Carts
(that don't cost much)
Add a shopping cart with Google Checkout - it's so easy
Add a PayPal Buy Button to sell one item, membership, or service
What's the best eCommerce option? Google Checkout vs PayPal vs. Amazon Payments
Traffic counters, email spam protection, newsletter services, favicons, and more
How to add or embed code from Google AdSense, Flickr, YouTube, and more using Dreamweaver
Compare: What's the difference between a Web site and a blog?
WordPress 101: How do you create a WordPress blog?
Dreamweaver CS5 enhanced support for editing WordPress blogs or theme
How to edit a WordPress blog with Dreamweaver
Testing Server: Set up a Web server to run WordPress, Joomla, or any CMS with Dreamweaver
Blogging Programs: Which is best: WordPress, TypePad, or Blogger?
CMS Review: What's the difference between WordPress, Joomla and Drupal and how do Content Management Systems Work?
Test your Web site in Internet Explorer, Firefox, Safari, and other web browers
Dreamweaver Quiz: Test your Dreamweaver Savvy (fun to play)
Code Review: Can you find the errors in this XHTML Page?
Planning Tools: Develop a task list for your Web site before you start building
Which Adobe Creative Suite is Right for You? Compare the programs in each creative suite
Google+ get's a lot of 'buzz,' and a little easier to join
3 Quick Tips to Attract More Visitors to Your Web Site
Ten Tips to make your Dreamweaver site more Search Engine Friendly
Earn status in Social Networks
Facebook: Should you show your face on a Fan Page, Group, or Profile?
How to send email newsletters (without looking like a spammer)
Email Newsletter Services: Reviews and Comparison Table
Sign up for Janine's Social Media Tips email newsletter
Review: Compare the feature of popular image editing programs
Creating and Optimizing images with Adobe Photoshop Save for Web
How to create and edit images with Adobe Photoshop Elements
I answer a lot of questions by email, but you may find an answer more quickly on this Web site.
Here are a few answers common questions:
I get a lot of email and I can't promise to answer them all, but I do try.
Sometimes I surprise people and answer a question right away, but sometimes messages get caught in my spam filter or I'm super busy...
Native apps, Web apps, iTunes apps, Android apps, what does it all mean?
And where does a web site fit into the brave new world of the mobile web and app stores?
This comparison table will help you better understand your options and why some sompanies are creating both.
A Native App
|
A Web App
|
|---|---|
Native apps must be downloaded from the iTunes Store, the Android Market, the Amazon Appstore, or a similar service. Native apps play locally on an iPhone, iPad, or other device. That means they 'execute' on your system not on a remote web server. In general, native apps provide the most options for rich media and interactivity. |
Web Apps: Highly interactive web-based programs, such as the reservation system at American Airlines (aa.com), provide app-like experiences from a web site. Web apps play in a web browser over a network (for example: wifi or 3G). Web apps require advanced programming skills. |
If you want to create high-end interactive games or other rich media with advanced interactive features ... Nothing compares with a native app when it comes to creating race car games that let you "drive" the car by tilting your iPhone or iPad back and forth. Accessing the accelerometer, location detection, and other advanced features often requires a native app. |
You can provide advanced interactivity with web apps. Just use Safari on an iPhone to view Facebook, Twitter, Amazon.com AA.com, and many other sites and you'll see that you can use a web app to manage reservations, protect banking information, and more. |
If you want to reach anyone, anytime, anywhere ... Most native apps require a relatively high-speed connection or a long wait for the initial download. After an app is downloaded, some can play anywhere, anytime, but many apps are designed to download additional information, such as GPS coordinates or news updates and require a connection for the latest information. |
Web apps require users to be connected, but if done well, they don't require a very fast connection and they can be updated in real time very efficiently. All web apps essentially run a program on a remote web server. Kill that connection, and you get nada. |
If you want to publish to many devices at once ... When you develop apps you have to create a version for each operating system. That means a different version for each of the following:
|
If you're focused on the latest in tablet and touchscreen devices, you can do a lot with a web app. If you want to reach the broadest audience, you'll want to deliver just the right version to each device using device detection and content adaptation. |
If you want to spend as little money as possible ... At the high end, you can easily spend hundreds of thousands of dollars developing rich-media interactive apps, especially when you factor in all the video, animation, and other assets that make games and other applications visually appealing -- and popular. Creating an app for the iPhone or iPad can cost anything from a few thousand to hundreds of thousands of dollars depending on the complexity. |
Most web apps are built by a team of programmers and other specialists. Sites like Gmail and Twitter represent hundreds of thousands of development hours. At the entry level, you can create many rich web app features with JavaScript, jQuery, or jTouch. At the high end, you can do almost anything these days if you have the time, budget, and programming chops. |
Contact | Terms & Conditions of Use | Privacy Policy | Site Map
Copyright 2001 to 2012. All rights reserved. DigitalFamily.com is owned and operated by Artesian Media, Inc.
