A web banner or banner ad is a form of advertising on the World Wide Web. This form of online advertising entails embedding an advertisement into a web page. It is intended to attract traffic to a website by linking them to the web site of the advertiser. The advertisement is constructed from an image (GIF, JPEG), JavaScript program or multimedia object employing technologies such as Java, Shockwave or Flash, often employing animation or sound to maximize presence. Images are usually in a high-aspect ratio shape. That is to say, either wide and short, or tall and narrow, hence the reference to banners. These images are usually placed on web pages that have interesting content, such as a newspaper article or an opinion piece.
internet access to supply the content in the first place.
Web banners function the same way as traditional advertisements are intended to function: notifying consumers of the product or service and presenting reasons why the consumer should choose the product in question, although web banners differ in that the results for advertisement campaigns may be monitored real-time and may be targeted to the viewer's interests.
Many web surfers regard these advertisements as highly annoying because they distract from a web page's actual content or waste bandwidth. Newer web browsers often include options to disable pop-ups or block images from selected websites. Another way of avoiding banners is to use a proxy server that blocks them, such as the "Shonenware"proxomitron.
We are in a period when banneradvertising seems to be on the wane.
But while bannerads aren't as effective as they once were, the truth is that a great many companies, large and small, still use bannerads as part of their advertising mix and will continue to do so.
Ad agencies have their unique self-serving spin, advertisers set their own objectives, and bannerad designers see something else again.
A section of the Opera user interface, the "banner window", is used to display images:.jpeg,.png, etc. This section is essentially a fixed document window in the size of a typical bannerad, but HTML, CSS, Java, scripting languages, and other such Web content is disabled in the banner window.
The content server decides which and how many banners will be served to your hard drive and stored, but the banners come directly from the advertisers, via the URLs that the content server has collected.
If a banner expires, and all its data has been sent as part of the activity report, Opera deletes both the file from the ACPO directory and the relevant banner from the cache.