The Mr. Nile Experiment
6: Invisible Structures
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  This isn't just a comic built for the web. It's a comic built from the web.
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  The panels you're looking at
now aren't really panels at all.
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  They're actually a collection of cells in a table that contain a mix of text, html formatting information and image tags.
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Let me make the table borders visible for a second and you'll see what I mean.
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  All clear?
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<font face="Arial, Helvetica,
sans-serif" size="3"
color="#000000">

<b> How about now?<br>

</b><font size="5">\</font><br>

<img src="panels/nile.gif"
width="70" height="96"></font>
  Comics, it has been said,
are just words and pictures.
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  But most comics on the web are actually pictures of words and pictures.
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  Which is perfectly understandable.
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  Most creators prefer the freedom of drawing a panel to the rather clunky process of assembling one in html.
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  But there are advantages
to working in the latter manner.
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  Remember yesterday?
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  If not, why not follow that hyperlink?
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  Did you spot what I did
just there? Subtle, wasn't it?
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  Links are a major feature of the World Wide Web, but few webcomics are set up to take full advantage of them
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Since my speech is a text element separate to my image, it's an easy matter to drop in links as often as I want.
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  It also makes it much simpler for search engines like Google to catalogue what I'm saying.
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  Still not convinced?
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  Perhaps I make more
sense in German?
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No? How about Spanish? French? Italian? Maybe Portuguese?
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  Because I'm talking in html, automated translation services can easily handle the conversion of my speech.
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  (How accurately they translate it is another matter. Although that should hopefully improve over time.)
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  I guess I've been
rambling a bit today.
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  And, to be honest, I've no
real punch line to all this.
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  I just felt that these were some points worth drawing your attention to.
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  Tomorrow: Thermonuclear
Explosions and You.
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e-merl.com << >>