Wed

May 18
2005

Rael Dornfest

Rael Dornfest

Ajax Patterns

Following a trackback from Brent Ashley, I ran across Michael Mahemoff's "Ajax Patterns: Design Patterns for Ajax Usability" post, now living in wiki form at AjaxPatterns.org.

AJAX holds a lot of promise for web usability, and the underlying technology has already delivered some stunning applications. But it’s no magic bullet. Careful design is always required, and it must be based specifically on the technology at hand. As AJAX emerges, we’re going to learn more about what sort of design works, and we’ll need ways of documenting this information and talking about it. Fortunately, the evolution of this particular technology will take place at a time when design patterns are well-entrenched in the industry, and design patterns are an excellent means of knowledge representation. Thus, it makes sense to begin cataloguing AJAX design patterns. These are some thoughts based on current examples and demo systems.

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Comments: 2

  pb [05.19.05 12:42 PM]

I wonder if we will ever rename this to "Aja" since XML is not always the data format. Gmail for example doesn't use XML. Does Google Maps?

Microsoft screwed up once again by binding the data format to the call method. It should just be "HttpRequest".

  Bocapdo [11.28.06 06:15 PM]

I want to learn about AJAX

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