Rippleffect is a leading provider of Web design in Liverpool and the whole of the UK. Our web design expertise is demonstrated in our work for top companies of the North West, including Everton Football Club and Chester Race Company.
Our competence has facilitated us to obtain national and international clients such as the Centre Island Hotels, Living Ventures, and EN Magazine, beyond web design in Liverpool and the North West.
As a Liverpool design agency, Web Design Liverpool is focussing its efforts on strengthening creative ideas and web design in Liverpool. Rippleffect's web design is particularly characterised by its creativity, technical skill, and web design expertise. Our web design focus on dynamic content makes us a precursor of web design in Liverpool, the North West, and the rest of the UK.
Since Liverpool was awarded the title of City of Culture 2008, artistic and entrepreneurial ventures are emerging increasingly, creating an atmosphere of creativity. This situation fosters the demand for web design in Liverpool, which Rippleffect is first to satisfy.
Web design in Liverpool is high on the agenda of the services in Liverpool is offering its customers in Liverpool and the UK, considering the importance design and appearance hold in our design conscious society which is displayed in all areas of private and business life. Web design is certainly part of this development, since it communicates the expertise and professionalism of an organisation offline as well as online.
Rippleffect's most important services, apart from web design in Liverpool, are search engine optimisation and online marketing. The optimised keyword 'web design Liverpool' would list Rippleffect's optimised page high in a search for the term 'web design Liverpool'.
Flash
Macromedia Flash is a proprietary, robust graphics animation/application development program used to create and deliver dynamic content, media (such as sound and video), and interactive applications over the web via the browser. It is not a standard produced by a vendor-neutral standards organization like most of the core protocols and formats on the Internet.
Many graphic artists use Flash because it gives them exact control over every part of the design, and anything can be animated and generally "jazzed up." Some application designers enjoy flash because it lets them create applications that don't have to be refreshed or go to a new web page every time an action occurs. There are many sites which forego HTML entirely for Flash.
Flash detractors claim that Flash websites tend to be poorly designed, and often use confusing and non-standard user-interfaces. Up until recently, search engines have been unable to index Flash objects, which has prevented sites from having their contents easily found. It is possible to specify alternate content to be displayed for browsers that do not support Flash. Using alternate content also helps search engines to understand the page, and can result in much better visibility for the page.
The most recent incarnation of Flash's scripting language (called "actionscript", which is an ECMA language similar to JavaScript) incorporates long-awaited usability features, such as respecting the browser's font size and allowing blind users to use screen readers. Actionscript 2.0 is an Object-Oriented language, allowing the use of CSS, XML, and the design of class-based web applications.
The final consensus is that Flash is simply a tool, and like all tools it takes a skillful craftsperson to know when, and how, to use it properly. Macromedia's other two products, Fireworks and Dreamweaver, makes Flash integration with graphics and HTML a lot easier.