Featured products and servicesadvertise here
|
Site Info - Autograph.org.ukOverview of web technologies used by Autograph.org.uk. Website Background Autograph | A Place to See Things DifferentlyPhotography that explores race, identity, representation, human rights and social justice. Visit our gallery in London - entry is free Description on Homepage Top 10m among all websites Popularity rank Microsoft's Active Server Pages technology on the .NET framework. ASP.NET 4.0.30319 JavaScript is a lightweight, object-oriented, cross-platform scripting language, often used within web pages. jQuery is a JavaScript library that simplifies HTML document traversing, event handling, animating and Ajax interaction. Originally developed by John Resig. jQuery 1.7.1 The Internet Information Services (IIS) are a set of Internet-based services for Windows, developed by Microsoft. Microsoft-IIS 10.0 Windows is an operating system produced by Microsoft. NTT Communications is a Japanese telecommunications company. Rackspace is a managed cloud computing company based in USA. This includes the former Datapipe brand.
NTT Communications is a Japanese telecommunications company. Rackspace is a managed cloud computing company based in USA. This includes the former Datapipe brand.
GoDaddy is a provider of internet services. This includes the former brand Media Temple. GlobalSign is an IT security service provider, also operating as SSL certificate authority. Google Hosted Libraries (formerly called Google Libraries API) is a content distribution network for the most popular, open-source JavaScript libraries, provided by Google. Google Hosted Libraries Google Analytics is a free service to get detailed statistics about the visitors of a website, provided by Google. This includes the Ads conversion tracking and the Floodlight services. The Google Advertising network consists of AdSense, DoubleClick and other services. The Google Tag Manager is a Google service to support webmasters to manage tags on their websites. External Cascading Style Sheets define style rules in a separate CSS file. Embedded Cascading Style Sheets define a set of style rules in a <style> element within a web page. Inline Cascading Style Sheets define style rules directly within an (X)HTML element using the style attribute. Session cookies are temporary cookies, which are deleted when the user closes the browser. Session Cookies Persistent cookies with an expiration time of up to 1 day. Cookies expiring in hours Persistent cookies with an expiration time between 1 month and 1 year. HttpOnly cookies are used only in the HTTP protocol and not in client side scripts, which may increase security. Non-HttpOnly cookies are used in the HTTP protocol and also in client side scripts, which may be a security threat. Non-HttpOnly Cookies Non-secure cookies may be used via an unencrypted connections, which may be a security threat. Gzip (GNU zip) is a file compression algorithm. The websites redirects visitors to use SSL encryption, e.g. from http://example.com/ to https://example.com/. JSON-LD (JavaScript Object Notation for Linked Data) is a method of encoding Linked Data using JSON. The Open Graph protocol, originally developed by Facebook, is an RDFa-based format that enables any web page to become a rich object in a social graph. Open Graph Twitter/X Cards enable automatic attachment of photos, videos and media elements to tweets. Twitter/X Cards HTML5 is the fifth revision of the HTML standard. UTF-8 (8-bit Unicode Transformation Format) is a variable-length character encoding for Unicode, which is backwards compatible with ASCII. PNG (Portable Network Graphics) is a lossless compression image format, suitable to store graphics with uniformly colored areas, and originally introduced as a free, open-source successor of GIF. JPEG (Joint Photographic Experts Group) is a lossy compression method suitable to store photographic images. GIF (Graphics Interchange Format) is a lossless compression image format, originally introduced by CompuServe and suitable to store graphics, logos and simple animations.
United Kingdom
Share this page |