Even back in the day, the correct answer was Sun's HotJava, running applets within a native Java runtime, which was killed in the crib to appease NetScape.
You've heard the cliche about how sufficiently complicated 'C' programs recreate LISP, only poorly?
20 years recreating WORM applets. 20 years recreating grid computing and software agents (now pimped as 'serverless').
Imagine the world today if Sun had had some saavy championing their own tech.
#2 Canvas. The inevitable omega point will be tunneling X-Windows thru the HTTP, HTML, CSS, JavaScript (WASM) obfuscation & error injection gauntlet.
Even back in the day, the correct answer was Sun's HotJava, running applets within a native Java runtime, which was killed in the crib to appease NetScape.
You've heard the cliche about how sufficiently complicated 'C' programs recreate LISP, only poorly?
20 years recreating WORM applets. 20 years recreating grid computing and software agents (now pimped as 'serverless').
Imagine the world today if Sun had had some saavy championing their own tech.
#2 Canvas. The inevitable omega point will be tunneling X-Windows thru the HTTP, HTML, CSS, JavaScript (WASM) obfuscation & error injection gauntlet.