October 2005
September 2005
YMail Beta Screenshots (Oddpost and Gmail too)
by cnkenlee & 1 otherYahoo!, who you may be familar with from their line of DVD players, just released the new beta of their webmail product.
August 2005
MapBuilder.Net - An excellent tool to build your own map without any knowle
by abidcom & 29 othersMapBuilder lets you tag locations on a map and publish it on your own site.Mapping is now easier than ever. It's free. MapBuilder is a tool to generate HTML/JavaScript/AJAX source code with Google Maps API calls that you can copy and paste into your own site.
July 2005
janschneider.de - Horde and PHP consulting and development
by nhoizey (via)Four proposals from students have been selected by Google for their Summer of Code program to be sponsored within the Horde Project
web design programming blog software reference music tools css javascript art news linux google ajax blogs java webdesign howto search cool internet politics fun mac maps humor rss development photography toread technology flash tech tutorial games funny
by hurlantenovaweb design programming blog software reference music tools css javascript art news linux google ajax blogs java webdesign howto search cool internet politics fun mac maps humor rss development photography toread technology flash tech tutorial games funny
June 2005
Google AJAXSLT
by 13121982 & 12 othersAJAXSLT is an implementation of XSL-T in JavaScript, intended for use in fat web pages, which are nowadays referred to as AJAX applications. Because XSL-T uses XPath, it is also an implementation of XPath that can be used independently of XSL-T.
Google AJAXSLT
by François Hodierne & 12 others (via)AJAXSLT is an implementation of XSL-T in JavaScript, intended for use in fat web pages, which are nowadays referred to as AJAX applications. Because XSL-T uses XPath, it is also an implementation of XPath that can be used independently of XSL-T.
Could Ajax Wash Away 'Smart Clients'?
by nhoizey (via)There's more than one way to write a powerful client app. Just ask the Google and Flickr folks.