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What is Click-Wait-and-Refresh-Cycle

Handbook of Research on Web 2.0, 3.0, and X.0: Technologies, Business, and Social Applications
This term was coined by Kevin Hakman (2006) . It describes the way users interact with traditional Web applications. A user clicks on a button or link, and the request is sent to the server and processed. The user waits until the results are returned to the Web browser, which refreshes the presentation.
Published in Chapter:
An Overview of and Criteria for the Differentiation and Evaluation of RIA Architectures
Marcel Linnenfelser (Synflag Web Engineering, Germany), Sebastian Weber (Fraunhofer Institute for Experimental Software Engineering (IESE), Germany), and Jörg Rech (Fraunhofer Institute for Experimental Software Engineering (IESE), Germany)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-60566-384-5.ch008
Abstract
An important aspect of Web 2.0, mentioned by Tim O’Reilly, is the rich user experience. Web 2.0 applications offer the user a desktop-like interface to bring back efficiency and productivity. The click-wait-andrefresh- cycle of normal Web applications leads to a less responsive, and thus less efficient, user interface. To serve the needs of these so-called rich Internet applications (RIA), many different approaches have emerged, based either on Web standards or on proprietary approaches. This chapter aims at defining a qualified criterion system for comparing RIA platforms. Thereafter, those RIA platforms are selected and analyzed in terms of the criterion system that is most likely to become widely accepted.
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