Animation For Web

Animation for quality brand, come in many shapes and forms from something as simple as a moving logo to a fully animated and Interactive website or movie designed to tell a story. But, how this Web Animation works out…? Actually nowadays, you can get animated figures all across the Internet! There are many technologies that web designers use to create animation, including: Animated GIFs, Dynamic HTML, Java, Shockwave and Flash
Web Animation is one of the new inventions or way of the Internet was the ability to integrate photographs and other illustrations with text on a web page. The illustrations come in the form of bitmap files. A bitmap file simply describes the color of each pixel in the image. To decrease the file size of these bitmap images, several different techniques are used to compress the image data. Typically, Web sites post these sorts of images as either JPEG files or GIF files. Animation is just a series of still images shown in sequence, so the easiest way to add animation to a Web site is to post a series of bitmap images that the user's browser displays in sequence. This sort of animation is called GIF animation. The main advantages of GIF animation are that it is incredibly simple to work with and it is automatically recognizable to most Web browsers.
Dynamic HTML - Some web designers wanted to add dynamic content to their Web sites, content that could change once the user had already downloaded a particular Web page. Dynamic HTML, or dHTML, is the term for the software technology that makes this possible. DHTML content is actually produced by using a number of complex scripting languages. Web innovators launched the idea of browser plug-ins. Plug-ins is programs that work with your browser to read and play a certain type of file. They are relatively small pieces of software, so it doesn't take users forever to download them off the Internet. They are specifically designed to work with a particular type of file, so they can accomplish a lot of things. Flash and Shockwave-Macromedia has had a great deal of success with two closely related formats, Flash and Shockwave. Flash is now the standard format for rich animation on the Web and Shockwave is a very popular format for presenting more complex animated content.
