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Subject: | RE: FLASH: Bandwidth & Binaries |
From: | Sooy, Matt |
Date: | Fri, 28 Aug 1998 21:10:45 +0100 |
OR, when a situation is best remedied by use of a flash file, you could
email a binary attachment DIRECTLY to the/those persons who would benefit
from it. Please do not make a habit of filling my box with attachments.
matt
> -----Original Message-----
> From: lenhabtcorp [dot] com [SMTP:lenhabtcorp [dot] com]
> Sent: Friday, August 28, 1998 12:44 PM
> To: flashershocker [dot] com
> Subject: FLASH: Bandwidth & Binaries
>
> As a newbie here, I apparently breached local netiquette with a 12K Flash
> attachment a couple of days ago. I also shot myself in the foot in doing
> so
> by sending a version protected from import. Sorry about that.
>
> But I'm interested in raising the issue of binary attachments here. I
> suggest the bandwidth issue may be a non-issue for many (most?) of us, and
> there are many benefits particularly with respect to Flash.
>
> 1) Flash produces very small files considering what they do. The design
> intent is Web delivery after all. Attaching flash files is not like
> attaching Photoshop documents, Director movies, or even a hefty gif or
> jpg.
> 2) Considering the low end of the spectrum at around 33.6 dialup
> connections, you should get throughput of about 3K bytes per second (33.6
> is
> what I use at home and downloads of compressed files run from about 2.6 to
> 3.8K per second) possibly more. So a 12 K file takes about 4 seconds to
> receive at the low end.
> 3) Suppose that ten people sent one file of this size each day. The
> additional download time for slow connections would be 40 seconds. There
> were about 102 messages posted yesterday. Suppose HALF of them included
> attachments this size? The download would be an additional 204 seconds or
> 3.4 minutes. That 3.4 minutes per day buys you 51 example files. Seems
> like
> a valid tradeoff here.
> 4) But how many people have connections significantly faster than 33.6? I
> myself am on a T1. How many have a continuous connection, even at ISDN
> speeds? For those of us who do, mail just comes as it does. Volume in
> terms
> of number of emails is more significant to me than file size since there's
> the need to look at what that envelope in the tray is all about.
> 5) Which brings us to the next issue: "Old Chinese Proverb". In the case
> of
> Flash a picture probably is worth a thousand words or even 2000. How many
> times does someone express a need to do something which others don't quite
> understand because they can't see it? And how often is an answer given
> that
> doesn't address the real question because of this? How often is the same
> answer repeated in different ways in an attempt to communicate something
> graphical in words alone? Seeing the movie and maybe taking the time to
> fix
> it or pass back an example would save all this. This could conceivably
> reduce the volume in terms of numbers of messages. It would also increase
> the signal to noise ratio.
> 6) The Chines Proverb seems even more relevent in Flash than elsewhere. If
> I
> have a problem in Director, I can quote a few lines of Lingo or maybe get
> a
> few lines that help. Same in DHTML with scripting and style sheets. Or
> nearly any programming language. This stuff works with words (including
> symbols) and is effectively communicated with words. But Flash is driven
> exclusively with dialogs and other graphic elements. It is much more
> difficult to communicate about a graphics program whose interface is fully
> graphical without some reference to the thing itself.
> 7) Of course, not all Flash movies are 12K or less. But I'd be surprised
> if
> the number of binary attachments actually reached 50%. 10% would probably
> be
> more reasonable. And, if the list software used here is anything like
> lists
> I've managed in the past, you can set a maximum attachment size to ensure
> that no one sends something larger than the commonly agreed upon standard.
> 8) The alternative to attachments used here frequently is pointers to Web
> sites. There's certainly value in this, particularly for people who
> maintain
> sites devoted to Flash information. For myself, I run two servers. One is
> intranet only, the other is a subscription-only internet server. My
> company
> would not be happy if I opened the second one up for Flash examples. I do
> maintain several sites across the internet and could conceivably devote
> one
> of these to Flash. But it turns into a bit of pain to ftp a flash file and
> update an html page to point to it for the sake of answering an email.
> It's
> a lot easier to drag the file from Explorer to Outlook and hit send. So
> it's
> also much more likely I'd do it if I had something useful on hand. Plus
> I'm
> disinclined to open things up to random strangers. Somehow a list such as
> this is different.
>
> Speaking of bandwidth, here's a fair amount of it. But I think it's
> relevent. What do others think? Should attached Flash movies be considered
> on topic here? This inquiring mind wants to know.
>
> len harrison
> instructional designer
> lenhabtcorp [dot] com
>
>
>
>
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