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`Apme,Exmbn1067,Page1
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`Apple, Exhibit 1067, Page 1
`
`

`

`FrontPage 98:
`_
`The Complete Reference
`
`Martin 3. Matthews
`
`Erik B. Poulsen
`
`Osborne McGraw-I-Iill
`Berkeley New York St. Louis San Francisco
`Auckland Bogoté Hamburg London Madrid
`Mexico City Milan Montreal New Delhi Panama City
`Paris 850 Paulo Singapore Sydney
`Tokyo Toronto
`
`Apple, Exhibit 1067, Page 2
`
`Apple, Exhibit 1067, Page 2
`
`

`

`2600 Tenth Street
`
`Berkeley, California 94710
`USA.
`
`For information on translations or book distributors outside the U.S.A., or to arrange
`bulk purchase discounts for sales promotions, premiums, or fund-raisers, please
`contact Osbome/McGraw-Hill at the above address.
`
`FrontPage 98: The Complete Reference
`
`Copyright © 1998 by Martin S. and Carole Boggs Matthews. All rights reserved.
`Printed in the United States of America. Except as permitted under the Copyright Act
`of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced or distributed in any form or by
`any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the prior written
`permission of the publisher, with the exception that the program listings may be
`entered, stored, and executed in a computer system, but they may not be reproduced
`for publication.
`
`4567890 AGM AGM 901987654321098
`
` Osborne / McGraw-Hill
`
`ISBN 0-07-882394-3
`
`Publisher
`Brandon A. Nordin
`
`Editor-in-Chief
`
`Scott Rogers
`
`Acquisitions Editor
`Wendy Rinaldi
`
`Project Editor
`Janet Walden
`
`Editorial Assistant
`
`Ann Sellers
`
`Technical Editor
`John Cronan
`
`Copy Editor
`Jan Jue
`
`Proofreader
`
`Karen Mead
`
`Indexer
`Valerie Robbins
`
`Computer Designer
`Iani Beckwith
`
`Illustrator
`
`Leslee Bassin
`
`Series Design
`Peter Hancik
`
`Infomation has been obtained by Osbome/McGraw—Hill from sources believed to be reliable. However, because of the
`possibility of human or mechanical error by our sources, Osbome/McGraw-Hill, or others, Osbome/McGraw-Hill does
`not guarantee the acmracy adequacy, or completeness of any information and is not responsible for any errors or omissions
`or the results obtained from use of such information.
`
`Apple, Exhibit 1067, Page 3
`
`Apple, Exhibit 1067, Page 3
`
`

`

`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`Chapter 1: Designing and
`
`Creating Quality Web Applications
`
`the point where popular web servers are noticeably slower at peak times of the day
`onnections.
`and on weekends, even with wide—bandwidth c
`
`Web Browsers
`All web browsers interpret and display HTML-encoded files. HTML 3.2 is the current
`accepted standard, and HTML 4.0 is being developed. The manufacturers of web
`browsers, principally Microsoft and Netscape, have (as usual) created their own
`extensions outside the HTML standard. This has been good for the Web to the extent
`made faster, but the compatibility of
`that advances in browser capabilities have been
`ffered by Microsoft and Netscape are ‘
`browsers has suffered. Someof the extensions 0
`compatible with each other, while others will only work with their own browser.
`Today, visible differences between the major browsers are minor. The largest
`as Java and ActiveX (see Chapter 16),
`differences are for support of technologies such
`and scripting languages such as JavaScript and VBScript (see Chapter 13).
`The next battleground between Microsoft and Netscape is the area of push
`technologies. Push is the process of automatically downloading web content to a
`browser. The user first subscribes to a channel, then, when he or she opens an Internet
`connection, the browser checks the channels the user has subscribed to for new
`content. When new content is found, it is downloaded to the browser. Microsoft’s
`standard, the Channel Definition Format (CDF), is (of course) incompatible with
`Netscape's Netcaster format. PointCast, http:llwww.pointcast.com, is the current
`leader in pushing content and supports the CDF standard. You will learn more about
`push technology and how to use it to push your own content, in Chapter 16.
`of the HTML tags introduced by
`Figure 1-7 shows a web page that uses some
`Microsoft and Netscape displayed by use of Microsoft's Internet Explorer 4.0. Figure
`1—8 shows the same page displayed with Netscape Navigator 4.0, Figure 1-9 shows the
`page displayed with NCSAMosaic 3.0, Figure 1-10 shows the page in the FrontPage 98
`Editor’s Preview window, and Figure 1-11 shows the page in the FrontPage 98 Editor’s
`Normal Window. As you can see, each browser, using its default settings, displays the
`HTML file slightly differently. The greatest differences are apparent in Mosaic 3.0.
`This page, an essay by Moms Online (http://wwwmomsonline.com) columnists
`Merion Jones and Ruth Gordon, relies heavily on tables (see Chapter 8) for placement
`H
`of the various design elements. At the top of the page is a navigation bar, which is a
`Home") placed in a single-row table
`series of text graphics (starting with one labeled
`with a blue background. Both Internet Explorer 4.0 and Netscape 4.0 display the table
`and graphics correctly, though Internet Explorer 4.0 also allows you to set top and side
`margins, while Netscape Navigator and NCSA Mosaic do not. Mosaic also does not
`support colored backgrounds in tables, so each navigation graphic stands alone
`against the page’s background. (Even though Figures 1-7 through 1—9 aren’t in color,
`-7 and 1-8 are contained in a
`you can see that the navigation bars in Figures 1
`rest of the page, whereas in Figure
`continuous area that is a different color than the
`1-9, you can see the parts of the page between the elements of the navigation bar.)
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`Apple, Exhibit 1067, Page 4
`
`Apple, Exhibit 1067, Page 4
`
`

`

`FrnntPage 98: The Complete Reference
`
`
`
`
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`Apple, Exhibit 1067, Page 5
`
`Apple, Exhibit 1067, Page 5
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`Apple, Exhibit 1067, Page 6
`
`Apple, Exhibit 1067, Page 6
`
`

`

`
`FrontFa-ge 98: The Complete Reference
`
`1:"2
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`The headline uses properties of the <FONT> tag to set the font size and color.
`Again, Internet Explorer and Netscape Navigator support these properties, while
`NCSA Mosaic does not. Another difference between the browsers is that both Internet
`
`Explorer and Netscape allow text to be wrapped around tables, while Mosaic does not.
`This means that the text of the article starts below the table containing the photograph
`of Merton Jones in Mosaic, rather than even with the top of it, as in Intemet Explorer
`and Netscape.
`Though it’s not illustrated in the previous examples, another significant difference
`between Internet Explorer and Netscape is that netscape interprets HTML code much
`more strictly than Internet Explorer. Slight coding errors will still yield the intended
`display in Internet Explorer, while Netscape will make even the smallest errors
`apparent. Figure 1—12 shows part of an essay by Mia Nicholson abOut raising her
`standard poodle, Moses. The first letter of the paragraph ("I") has been formatted as
`Size 5 and blue. In Internet Explorer, shown in Figure 1—12, the page looks as it was
`intended. Figure 1—13 shows the same page in Navigator 4.03. The entire text is Size 5
`and blue because Navigator’s interpretation of the HTML file did not restore the
`balance of the paragraph to Normal text. This text was not created in FrontPage; it was
`created in an AOL editor that doesn’t adhere to HTML 3.2. The editor’s loose
`
`interpretation of HTML, combined with Netscape’s strict interpretation, produces a
`
`page that doesn’t appear as intended. Internet Explorer, on the other hand, basically
`
`
`
`Apple, Exhibit 1067, Page 7
`
`Apple, Exhibit 1067, Page 7
`
`

`

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`Apple, Exhibit 1067, Page 8
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`Apple, Exhibit 1067, Page 8
`
`
`

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`Apple, Exhibit 1067, Page 9
`
`
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`
`Apple, Exhibit 1067, Page 9
`
`

`

`Heintz, James M.
`
`m F
`
`rom:
`Sent:
`To:
`
`ILS System <voyager©sun21.loc.gov>
`Friday, February 13, 2015 9:14 AM
`Heintz, James M.
`
`Subject:
`
`Copyright catalog Left Anchored Name Search for Matthews Martin
`
`Type of Work:
`
`Text
`
`Registration Number/ Date:
`TX0004614002 /1998-02-13
`
`Title:
`
`FrontPage 98 : the complete reference / Martin 5. Matthews,
`Erik B. Poulsen.
`
`imprint:
`
`Berkeley: Osborne McGraw—Hiil, c1998.
`
`Description:
`
`728 p. + CD-ROM.
`
`Copyright Claimant:
`Martin 5. Matthews & Carol B. Matthews
`
`Date of Creation: 1997
`
`Date of Publication:
`1997-11-20
`
`Previous Registration:
`Appl. states no claim to CD-ROM program.
`
`Basis of Claim: New Matter: rest of work.
`
`Variant title:
`
`FrontPage 98 : the complete reference
`
`Names:
`
`Poulsen, Erik B.
`Matthews, Martin 5.
`Matthews, Carol B.
`
`++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
`
`The Library of Congress
`United States Copyright Office
`101 Independence Ave, SE.
`Washington, D.C. 20559-6000
`202-707-3000
`
`Apple, Exhibit 1067, Page 10
`
`Apple, Exhibit 1067, Page 10
`
`

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