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CommunityOne West and JavaOne: Free Event in San Francisco for Open Source Developers and Other Techies for Good

NTEN

Here's the official low-down: Get up to speed on dozens of free and open-source projects driving innovation in cloud computing, Web application development, social and collaborative technologies, and more. Choose from 70+ expert led talks on: Cloud Platforms - Development and deployment in the cloud.

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2011 NTC Preview: Practical HTML5/CSS3 for Nonprofits

NTEN

AJAX, SEO, B2B anyone -- around Web Design and Development. If things are moving around your screen in a really exciting way, chances are there is some serious CSS3 or JavaScript doing the heavy lifting and HTML5 has only served as the canvas on which those scripting gymnastics occur. The crowd will be huge, right? And cheering?

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4 Nerdiest Upcoming Convio Features

Connection Cafe

Anyone who has ever written an AJAX application will likely agree that while it makes sense from a security perspective, the "same origin policy" is the root of all evil. If you want to learn more about CORS and Access-Control-Allow-Origin, the Mozilla Developer Network has an article with lots of useful information. Oh, memories.

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Buzzword Buzz

Michael Stein's Non-profit Technology Blog

refers to several new approaches to web application development that use tools your browser has been supporting all along, but use them in new ways. One key development - to me perhaps the most exciting - is an approach to web development called AJAX. This is just what Ajax means to change. That's Ajax as well.

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J is for javascript.

Michael Stein's Non-profit Technology Blog

If you do some web programming but you haven't tried the new Ajax techniques in your Web projects yet, you can find some great examples that demystify the whole thing in Ajax Hacks , by Bruce Perry. So it's what's on my mind. Still seems pretty complicated? You might want to try JSON (javascript object notation).

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Hub-bub

Michael Stein's Non-profit Technology Blog

She also features interviews with the developers of projects that catch her interest. You should regularly monitor eHub if you want to see what the developers are up to out there. But while I've known about eHub for a long time, somehow I was oblivious to Max Kiesler's mHub site. In other words, its a candy store for programmers.

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