Yes, controlling/utilizing the browser history (via the history class)
to conform to the user experience expected by most - when/if deemed
appropriate by the developer.

/Casper

On 30 Jun., 21:42, Bill Robertson <[email protected]> wrote:
> "Notice for instance, as you click on a message in
> GMail, how you navigate to a unique item under your inbox with the
> back button working as an undo. Could that be done with Silverlight,
> Flash and JavaFX? "
>
> Are asking about tying the browser back button to the Flash,
> Silverlight, JavaFX application?
>
> On Jun 29, 10:04 pm, Casper Bang <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > True, there's a difference between wide-spectred content websites
> > (typically the Internet) and applications (typically intranets). I
> > would distinguish discoverable from addressable (think REST) in what
> > it allows, particular in relation to a semantic web and a full fledged
> > hypermedia system. Notice for instance, as you click on a message in
> > GMail, how you navigate to a unique item under your inbox with the
> > back button working as an undo. Could that be done with Silverlight,
> > Flash and JavaFX?
>
> > /Casper
>
> > On 30 Jun., 03:17, Michael Neale <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > Not sure if that is right - "discoverable data" is more a function of
> > > what the app does, more so then how it is built. Google index flash
> > > "web sites" quite heavily, and in flash you can make things
> > > "dicoverable" as well.
>
> > > Also, look at GMail, Wave etc - how are they "discoverable"
>
> > > Don't confuse web sites (all about content/nouns) with web apps (all
> > > about the actions/verbs) - latter is what is up for debate really.
> > > Even the former built in flash if you want is indexable.
>
> > > On Jun 30, 5:56 am, ctwise <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > > Google wants very much for everything to move to HTML.  They don't
> > > > want Flash.  They don't want Silverlight.  They don't want JavaFX.
> > > > All of those technologies move us away from discoverable data and all
> > > > of the benefits of simple HTML.
>
> > > > HTML5 and Chrome are an attempt to make Flash and plug-ins pointless.
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