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14 February 2008

History of AJAX

The term Ajax was invented in February 2005 by the person Jesse James Garrett. He thought this term when he becomes conscious for shorthand to be a symbol of matching set technologies.

The majority of technologies that allow Ajax on track a decade before with the initiative of Microsoft’s in developing the Remote Scripting. In 2003 an article was available by referring to initiative as the Netscape Evangelism, Inner-Browsing which to had the ideas for implementing the models wherein “all the navigation of webpage occurs in a single page, the same as in a usual application interface.” In 1996 the techniques of asynchronous loading content were introduced on an accessible Web page exclusive of requiring a complete reload date back to the extent that the IFRAME element types as well as the element type LAYER were introduced for Netscape 4 in 1997, discarded for the period of early development of Mozilla. LAYER and IFRAME both had an element of src that can get any outside URL, also by loading a web page having JavaScript so as to controlled the parent web page, Ajax-like effect can be get. This group of technologies on client-side was generally grouped collectively in the general term of DHTML.

Microsoft’s Remote Scripting (MSRS), introduced in 1998, acted as a more elegant replacement for these techniques, with data being pulled in by a Java applet with which the client side could communicate using JavaScript. This technique worked on both Internet Explorer version 4 and Netscape Navigator version 4 onwards. Microsoft then created the XMLHttpRequest object in Internet Explorer version 5 and first took advantage of these techniques using XMLHttpRequest in Outlook Web Access supplied with the Microsoft Exchange Server 2000 release.

The Web development community, first collaborating via the Microsoft. Public scripting. remote newsgroup and later through blog aggregation, subsequently developed a range of techniques for remote scripting to enable consistent results across different browsers.

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This entry was posted on 14 February 2008 at 10:43 AM and is filed under Uncategorized. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

One comment

1. 
CSSnewbie

Thats too!
You’re cool guys, you have posts even for new users like me!

4 March 2008 at 11:49 PM

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