34010Head Rush Ajax [ILLUSTRATED] (Paperback)http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0596102259?v=glanceSick of creating web sites that reload every time a user moves the mouse? Tired of servers that wait around to respond to users' requests for movie tickets? It sounds like you need a little (or maybe a lot of) Ajax in your life. Asynchronous programming lets you turn your own web sites into smooth, slick, responsive applications that make your users feel like they're back on the information superhighway, not stuck on a dial-up backroad.Ajax > Tips and TutorialsNov 11, 2006O'Reilly Media
Through JSP, developers will have the ability to build a webpage that will not require a very strong bandwidth. A simple Java application will require the user an installed Java and a faster bandwidth for loading, JSP will only require the user a pre-installed Java and the rest will be rendered in HTML. JSP even goes further as it uses XML as its mark-up languag
Unfortunately, some developers have used it rather more than they should. Of course when a good thing is overused, it becomes really bad. The case of XMLHttpRequest is no different. When the function is overused it tends to overlap over some of the important things a website should have.
A List Apart is pleased to present the following excerpt from Chapter 27 of Web Design in a Nutshell (O?Reilly Media, Inc., third edition, February 21, 2006). ?Ed.
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