As I mentioned on January 10th, I'm going through a stack of AJAX books. The first of the bunch is AJAX: Creating Web Pages with Asynchronous JavaScript and XML, by Edmond Woychowsky (Prentice-Hall, ...
In modern web development, AJAX (asynchronous JavaScript and XML) is a technique that allows web applications to communicate with a server asynchronously, retrieving and sending data without ...
If you’ve used Google Maps, Gmail or Microsoft’s Outlook Web Access, you’re familiar with the power of AJAX, which gives Web applications the responsiveness that users associate with desktop ...
It's easy to see why AJAX (asynchronous JavaScript and XML) has captured the imaginations of so many Web developers. For the first time, browser-based UIs are rich and full-featured enough to do away ...
The web has seen a huge change over the last couple of years. Gone are the days when clicking on a link mean a long wait staring at a blank screen, while the next page loaded. In what is popularly ...
Asynchronous JavaScript and XML can make your business Web pages more responsive and interactive. AJAX technology allows site visitors to use drop-down menus and other controls to trigger actions ...
Although the acronym AJAX is fairly straightforward, derived from Asynchronous JavaScript and XML, it’s significant because it captures a paradigm shift in the delivery of Web page content. The AJAX ...
Last month, we began to dip our toes into the water of Ajax, the shorthand name for asynchronous JavaScript and XML, which has taken the world of Web development by storm. Ajax applications are Web ...
Social networks are peppering the Internet with Facebook-like interactive features. Ajax (Asynchronous JavaScript and XML) is fast becoming the defacto programming tool for Web developers. But by ...
In the beginning, Tim Berners-Lee created HTTP and the Web. And the Web was without commerce, and void. And darkness was upon the face of retailers. And the spirit of commerce, Jeff Bezos, moved upon ...