Contents tagged with AJAX
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AJAX > Flash in 2007
"Ektron and SitePoint did a survey of 5,000 web developers over the US summer, and have just released the results in a report entitled The State of Web Development 2006/2007. It's packed full of useful data, even in the 25-page preview (which is free). The bits that particularly interested me were the following two charts, on which web technologies developers and organizations are using now - and plan to use in future.
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Stealing History (Part 2)
Cody Swann has a modified version of the exploit using prototype that works in IE and has support for AJAX requests:
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Simple AJAX Steps for Success
We are doing a ton of AJAX work with [AO]. Here are 10 helpful hints if you are considering using AJAX in an upcoming project:
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Dare on AJAX / RSS
Great post by Dare
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Best Online Aggregator
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IE Beta 3 Lockups
Seems like every time I send a message in OWA, IE beta 3 locks up. I love IE, but these lock ups need to stop. To be fair, FireFox locks up on me occasionally too... but not nearly as much as this new IE build. If you are listening IE team, my biggest IE peeves have to be the lockups and the fact that the javascript debugging / error experience blows serious chunks. As AJAX gets more and more popular, people are going to prefer Mozilla more and more simply because it gives decent error messages and its javascript console's error log is far superior to IE's javascript error handling.
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Insane Web 2.0 Tool
Aptana. Download it now and add it to your list of must have tools. It's open source and it will rock your world.
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Tim O'Reilly's Big Fat Head (2.0)
Apparently, Tim O'Reilly is in agreement [1] with his company's moves on trying to monopolize the Web 2.0 term. The worst part about this ordeal is that his company is acting as if we wouldn't have any term to call this whole next-generation web if it wasn't for his conference. I have news for you Tim, you didn't popularize the term, the people who spoke at your conference did. You didn't invent anything, you just came up with a catchy term to describe something that already happened and now you want to act like you own the concept.
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WPF/E
Tim Anderson has some commentary on WPF/E. He sums up his thoughts like this: