Category: weblogs

  • Record of Events 13 December 2004

    An advantage quite often has a flipside; a strength that is also a weakness. One of the major strengths of the Internet is the speed with which information can be disseminated, change propagated. But this rapid ...

  • Does a domain name matter? 12 August 2004

    When you're bringing a new venture to the Web, the first thing you have to do is head to your nearest domain name purveyor and decide what name they shall deign to permit you. If you're bringing an existing identity to ...

  • Evolve to design 01 July 2004

    Design, like many things, relies more on history than you might expect. The well worn path created by the footfalls of those before you represents the evolution of years of experience. For every web site that has ...

  • Killed with his own spanner 23 June 2004

    Have you heard the news? Webmonkey's EKG has beeped unexpectedly in the silence of the night, signalling its return from an untimely death. No official word, but a fresh article and "Today's Monkey Bite" seem to herald ...

  • [R]ather [S]wanky [S]ourcecode 16 January 2004

    All the kids seem to be doing it nowadays, so I thought I'd create an RSS feed for this site (and also because Dave S asked, nay, demanded to be updated!) It seems to be a good way to go if ...

  • Drowning in voices 13 January 2004

    Yesterday I had a bit of free time and went a bit comment crazy on other people's sites. But not as crazy as I could have. Sometimes when I'm reading an article and feel moved to respond I'll scroll ...

  • Karaoke code re-use 06 December 2003

    I've be an infrequent reader of weblogs for a while now, but this week was witness to quite a few hours of weblog scouring; meandering from place to place, wherever my mouse dared take me. And I've come to a conclusion ...

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My Book: The JavaScript Anthology

The JavaScript Anthology

The JavaScript Anthology contains over 100 solutions to common Web development challenges such as drag-and-drop interfaces, client-server communication with AJAX/remote scripting, DHTML animation, and many more.

All code used in the book is unobtrusive and accessible, and a key focus is placed upon creating modern, cross-browser scripts.

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