I want to create a web page that contains an (Flex/Flash) audio player that doesnt get reloaded when the page reloads. Currently, i am popping out the player in a new window. Please check to see it in action.
What i want to achieve is to have the player in the same window, but it shouldnt reload. I am sure many of you will say use AJAX to prevent reloading of page like songza.fm. But the problem is search engines cannot index AJAX applications. This is true for a full fledged Flex app as well.
Is there any way to have the player in the same window? but not reload.
Thanks
I want to create a web page that contains an (Flex/Flash) audio player that doesnt get reloaded when the page reloads. Currently, i am popping out the player in a new window. Please check http://www.paadal. to see it in action.
What i want to achieve is to have the player in the same window, but it shouldnt reload. I am sure many of you will say use AJAX to prevent reloading of page like songza.fm. But the problem is search engines cannot index AJAX applications. This is true for a full fledged Flex app as well.
Is there any way to have the player in the same window? but not reload.
Thanks
Just add Ajax to existing page hierarchy, change each link to ajax call after page load (with javascript) and only reload content of some container. If you do it that way, search engines (and users without JS, with mobile phones for example) can access your page, and users with JS enabled can get bonus as music player
No, you cannot have a single element exempt from a page-reload, not without loading portions of the page via asynchronous calls to the server. When a window refreshes, it flushes the DOM out, including your mp3 player.
saying "searching engines cannot index AJAX apps" is totally dependent on how the application is written, there are plenty of ways to write an application that is still spider-able and plenty of other techniques for indexing (like www.sitemaps implimented by most major search vendors)
You can not maintain anything in a browsers memory after leaving the page (which is implied by a page reload)
For your use, it sounds like using old HTML frames/framesets could easily solve your issue, with a hidden frame containing your audio and the rest of your site in the main frame window.
It depends on the design of your website. You can us a standard html background sound, embedded media player or flash player on your main web page. The others pages will have to be used as a single pop up layered into each other. this will cause your music from the main page to play and allow you to navigate throughout your website because you linked the popup pages. To return to the main page use a close window script .