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 users associate with desktop applications.
As IT increases its dependence on Web-based systems to deliver business applications, it sacrifices end-user productivity and real-time updating of information. Web browsers have always been good at ...
Phobos is a lightweight, scripting-friendly, web application environment that runs on the Java platform. Using Phobos, you can take advantage of the benefits offered by scripting languages and ...
Google announced yesterday the official release of the Google Web Toolkit (GWT), a Java-based platform for the development of AJAX web applications that work in all mainstream web browsers. Designed ...
Messaging company Zimbra is one of several companies betting that Ajax-style Web development will shake up the PC software market. Martin LaMonica is a senior writer covering green tech and ...
AJAX (Asynchronous JavaScript and XML) is now widely known as a technique used in client-side interactions. However, AJAX requires special coding for asynchronous requests and for server-side ...
Model-driven and event-driven architectures are two technologies expected to have a big impact on developers over the next decade. And while many IT professionals are in the dark about much of Gartner ...
More thoughts on why Ajax is bad for web applications I feel like I always preface these kinds of posts, but I want to make it abundantly clear that I'm not on some kind of crusade against Ajax. When ...
This application note presents Zilog®’s eZ80AcclaimPlus!™ embedded server used as AJAX web page and monitoring through the Internet. It briefly presents the features of eZ80F91, a short description on ...
An emerging Web development technique promises to shake up the status quo in PC software and blur the line between desktop and Web applications. Over the years, desktop applications tied to a specific ...