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34 Comments
- annjay, on 03/08/2009, -5/+27This collection is simply amazing and useful for me.
- williepepper, on 03/09/2009, -8/+25WTF, how did this make it to the front page, it's about technology not the crashing economy, Obama, the gays, or how this will be The Year Of Linux.
- miken32, on 03/09/2009, -2/+15More like "50 jQuery, MooTools, and scriptaculous plug ins that may or may not be new or useful, and 20 Javascript techniques, some of which may be 3 years old (like Stuart Lanridge's sortable tables.)"
I guess that was too long. - sith333, on 03/09/2009, -3/+10I actually think this is one of the most extensive, well-organized of such lists floating in the aether.
- gluecode, on 03/09/2009, -0/+3Excellent collection with links to demos. Having everything in a single page is great, thanks!
- CoryTrevor, on 03/09/2009, -0/+3Sorry, but in a "Post 9-11 World" we need marketing catch phrases more than ever.
</Sarcasm> - inactive, on 03/09/2009, -0/+2Ajax committed suicide.... I don't think he'll be cleaning many tubs or sinks.
- garrettg84, on 03/09/2009, -7/+9'2.0', 'web 2.0' and all others like it are dead. they are stupid marketing catch phrases that never meant anything except for those who know crap about technology. notice nowhere in the description, title, or actual article is the phrase uttered.
just don't...don't spread the idiocy - inactive, on 03/09/2009, -0/+2This collection is simply amazing, but not useful for me.
- inactive, on 03/09/2009, -0/+1Damn soo many new and usefull ajax technique in this world, must be like 30 to 70 per week! how awesome !
still i guess you have to be really good to see the difference between this week/month ones and last week/month ones... - KritterKat, on 03/09/2009, -0/+1Right on. I need to keep this list handy.
- masterfan, on 09/27/2009, -0/+1good java-techniques @ http://www.metapoker.net
- masterfan, on 09/27/2009, -0/+1great java-techniques @ http://www.metapoker.net
- whytey, on 03/09/2009, -1/+2Its SmashingMagazine everything from them makes the front page
- Xazos, on 03/09/2009, -0/+1Its hard to filter through new ajax+prototype+jquery plugins cause there's so many! And so many that aren't for the right use, dont agree with other scripts..etc. Great list, i especially love the silver Unobtrusive datePicker widget. Not too keen on a slider for pagination though..
- inactive, on 03/10/2009, -0/+1I stand corrected, looking through, these are very useful to me.
- Sonic_Molson, on 03/09/2009, -3/+3I see AJAX in about none of these...it's plain javascript at best.
- linuxpenguin, on 03/09/2009, -3/+3Thanks for the clarification - all this time I was thinking that AJAX itself was a JavaScript technique!
(AJAX = Asynchronous JavaScript And XML) - GreenMushroom16, on 03/09/2009, -0/+0Amen
- inactive, on 03/10/2009, -1/+1i'll check it first....thanks for sharing
- 7aji, on 03/09/2009, -1/+1Love that menu #4 !!! got it working in less than 4 minutes with a tiny knowledge in JS.
If you would excuse me now, I have a menu to play with for the next hour ;) - blackinthmiddle, on 03/09/2009, -1/+1Read the title again, will you? It says "70 New, Useful AJAX *And* JavaScript Techniques". That means not all techniques are Ajax, but some are. For example, all of the autocompleter stuff is Ajax.
- ch4os1337, on 03/09/2009, -1/+11089 Diggs, 25 comments. The last time there was a story like this was a year and a half ago {see related by keyword}.
- darkism, on 03/09/2009, -1/+1lol@web dev with ASP.
- hexagramme, on 03/09/2009, -1/+0Just awesome!
- djnforce9, on 03/09/2009, -1/+0Very nice collection although some of them don't seem to fully take advantage of AJAX itself but are purely JavaScript tricks including fancy collapsible elements (i.e doing a view source, I can already see all the content pre-loaded). When I think of AJAX, "scripts that only pull what is being displayed and then the content remains in tact until the page is refreshed to avoid redundant requests" comes to mind (e.g. using that collapsible elements example again, the content would only be pulled from the web server when you choose to expand one of the items and then it would be cached so that it doesn't have to reload every time). I've done that before when I populated a drop down box with elements from a database based on the selection of another drop down box (which was actually based on the contents of yet another box). Unless you do "View Selection source" which shows everything on screen, all you will see in the regular "view source" is the DIV tag where the generated box appears.
Nevertheless (technicalities aside), I really like this article. Some of those tools may become useful to me some time in the future depending on what I am developing. - wsuBobby, on 03/11/2009, -2/+1What's wrong with ASP?
- JoJodd1, on 03/09/2009, -1/+0Yes, I've finded this information in the internet not long ago..
- JoJodd1, on 03/09/2009, -2/+0Fun stuff.
- Forbizzle, on 03/09/2009, -3/+1Why are all these web development lists impossibly large? 70 "new" and "useful" I highly doubt, and "Ajax" most likely not.
- SaPpHiReLaNiNjA, on 03/10/2009, -2/+0If you want to get rid of your old mobo's, I have an ongoing project to recycle them for a good cause http://digg.com/hardware/Mobo_Art_Project
- austroLogi, on 03/09/2009, -3/+0I've used prototype before and loved it. Haven't done any JS in awhile tho.
- koick, on 03/09/2009, -9/+4Nothing earth shattering, but a good place to start if you want to implement some of these 2.0 bells.
- kmattso, on 03/09/2009, -9/+3Many of these things you get with asp.net ajax.
Nice list though.


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