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Banner adserver da ,neden i-frame teknolojisi kullaniyoruz ?
If youve visited Yahoo! email or any of a few thousand pages
elsewhere on the Internet recently, youve seen HTML frames
in action. Much as their name implies, frames surround the content
of a web page, and in the case of Yahoo! email, do so using a scrollbar
in the middle and a menu on the left, so while the user is scrolling
through the content the frame stays put, keeping other Yahoo! content
accessible. On other sites, the same technology is used to separate
the top of a page from the bottom, the left side from the right,
and a multitude of other combinations. While frame technology may
not seem revolutionary or even remotely exciting, it is the basis
for another web design element called an inline frameor I-Framewhich
is significantly more useful for the purposes of this particular
story.
As you can probably guess, I-Frames can and do serve ads, and while
to the end user they look like regular graphics on a web page, the
technology behind I-Frames makes them much more attractive to advertisers
than a regular banner. Essentially an I-Frame appears as an image
on the page. The host browser reserves space for the I-Frame just
as it would for a banner, a skyscraper, a half-page or full-page
ad, or another format, and while the host page is loading it requests
the I-Frame contents from another web page, an ad server, or anywhere
else on the Internet.
I-Frames can contain text, links, or any other HTML or rich media
(Flash, etc.) element. Theyre also scrollable (like their
predecessors), so you can scroll through a documentor an entire
web pageinside an I-Frame without scrolling the original page.
But the best features of I-Frames are that (1) tracking displays
and click-throughs is really easy, and (2) their technology allows
advertisers to change their creative mid-campaign without sending
new tags.
As with any new technology, there are some problems with I-Frames,
one being fairly commonthey dont seem to work properly
on Macintosh computers. There are also several reports of I-Frames
not working properly with older browser versions, but an animated
GIF banner tag, now appears between the starting and ending I-Frame
tags, which ensures that compatible browsers see the I-Frame and
incompatible ones see a GIF. If nothing else, I-Frames are more
robust than Shockwave tags, which claim to be capable of such substitution
but in reality very rarely work. Another turn-off is that most email
systems dont know what to do with an I-Frame. So while running
a website campaign using I-Frames is relatively headache-free, an
email campaign would be very problematic. Naturally, as HTML email
becomes the norm and plain text the exception, email readers will
be forced to deal with all HTML elements, including I-Frames.
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