[dba-Tech] "Take a sad song and make it better..." - Web browsers' testing automation with Selenium WebDrivers from LucidChart.com :)

Salakhetdinov Shamil mcp2004 at mail.ru
Sun Oct 25 16:27:19 CDT 2015


 Hi Jim --

<<<  no longer can professional web sites be built by a single developer, unless he/she has six months available without interruption and an extensive knowledge of all the disciplines... >>>

I have just finished one, it's in production now, not a big web site but for a big local company :)

Nowadays in MS stack there are very advanced web development technologies - for all kinds of UI it's Telerik - "MS Access on steroids", for back end - it's C#, ASP.NET (Web API2), MS SQL. I don't even mention MS Azure, MS Office 365, MS SharePoint etc.

<<<  The costs of building a good secure site is so expensive ....>
What about    https://letsencrypt.org/howitworks/  ? :)

Thank you.

-- Shamil

>Sunday, October 25, 2015 2:03 PM -06:00 from Jim Lawrence <accessd at shaw.ca>:
>
>Hi All:
>
>Further to the post Shamil gave, I would like to extend my observations to the state of web development. First I should preface, the following comments with; I have not been very active in any real website development for a few years but have continued to follow the trends and technology and have a number of observations. 
>
>In a web site development, using a framework should be mandatory. 
>
>When it comes to websites, I like Yeoman's adaptable framework as there is so many components, in today's sites that just missing or making a mistake in one part of the layout can be very serious. Businesses using the web, for more than a postcard/facebook are completely exposed to anyone in the world regardless of the audiences intentions and seeing the company's whole future depends on their website...the site must be near perfect. Beyond just having an adaptable pretty face, security, flexibility, scalability, performance, reliability, is a must, and has to be incorporated within the latest technology. 
>
>Aside: One complaint I have is; no longer can professional web sites be built by a single developer, unless he/she has six months available without interruption and an extensive knowledge of all the disciplines...and who can afford to have a good website built without a lot of resources to pay for it. 
> 
>This is also why so many sites are getting hacked. The costs of building a good secure site is so expensive that site owners are running fully exposed and hoping the insurance will cover any losses, in the "unlikely" event, they actually are breached. OTOH, insurance companies are raising the cost of insurance and starting to take legal action against companies that have badly secured sites...so we shall see how that plays out. 
>
>It should be noted that this trend may create a good business climate for all the web developers out there.
> 
>Jim 
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