Both great examples!!

I can think of one other caveat at least that I am familiar with.

Using just a development computer and a web browser is there any way
to INCLUDE files so I dont have to keep editing the same navigation/
module sections in each page?



On Sep 26, 2:02 pm, "Jake McGraw" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Actually, if you'd like to use js to access a database, may I suggest
> Adobe AIR? Basically, in allows you to embed JS/HTML into an
> installable application, which allows you to move away from the
> browser security model and do all kinds of crazy stuff like cross site
> scripting, off-line operation and direct database interaction.
>
> I just attended the Adobe onAIR conference in NYC, there is a lot of
> interest in this new technology and I think jQuery could play a major
> role in desktop applications if this becomes popular.
>
> www.adobe.com/go/air
>
> - jake
>
> On 9/26/07, Danjojo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> > We have Java, .NET, PHP, and CFM...
>
> > As developers we can do pretty much any UI we want with javascript
> > (jquery), css, and semantic markup...
>
> > What can't we do?
>
> > Interact with an Enterprise database...
>
> > Unfortunately at the point we need a real RDBM database backend, we
> > are forced to choose one of the server-side languages above in order
> > to continue development.
>
> > I have not missed a news flash anywhere where this is NOT the case
> > have I?
>
> > Thanks,- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -

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