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75 (Really) Useful JavaScript Techniques

11 Sep
Vitaly Friedman & Sven Lennartz via Smashing Magazine shared by 12 people

Developers and designers are using more and more JavaScript in modern designs. Sometimes this can be a hindrance to the user and take away from the simplicity of the design, and other times it can add greatly to the user’s experience. The key is a) adding the right amount of JavaScript, and b) using the right JavaScript techniques. We have already collected various JavaScript techniques in the past – now it’s time for a new portion of JavaScript.

Thanks to the Web’s widespread adoption of JavaScript, JavaScript libraries have sprung up to help make design and development easier. Here are a few of the major JavaScript libraries that developers use: jQuery, Prototype, Scriptaculous, mootools, Dojo. These frameworks have thriving communities whose members have developed countless plug-ins that can greatly add to the JavaScript framework.

However, sometimes we need JavaScript solutions that are a little more involved or specific. Here are 75 more handy JavaScript techniques that have made websites much sleeker and more interesting.

75 Useful JavaScript Techniques

Textboxlist Auto-Completion
One of the most attractive features of JavaScript is the highly useful autocompletion. No other website does the autocompletion better than Facebook. They have created an elegant way to search for other Facebook users using the autocomplete feature. Once the user is found, their name is added with an outline and an “X” link to remove the name. TextboxList has mimicked this feature and created a little script for downloading.

TextboxList's Autocompletion

Hyphenation in Web
This project collects working solutions for automatic hyphenation in (X)HTML pages. For different human and script languages, server- and client-side. A JavaScript-solution, called Hyphenator.js is available as well. Hyphenator.js brings client-side hyphenation of HTML-Documents on to every browser by inserting soft hyphens using hyphenation patterns and Franklin M. Liangs hyphenation algorithm commonly known from LaTeX and Openoffice.

Showcase of Beautiful Album and CD covers- Hyphenation in Web

SocialHistory.js
SocialHistory.js enables you to detect which social bookmarking sites your visitors use. It cannot enable you to see all of the user’s history. It checks, in a 20-questions style, if the user has been to a particular URL: It’s hit or miss. SocialHistory.js has a big list of the most popular social bookmarking sites which it checks against. An alternative approach.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - SocialHistory.js

addSizes.js
This small JavaScript takes care of an automatic link file-size generation. For instance, if you have large .mp3- or .pdf-files offered on your page, this script automatically checks the size of the file and displays the format and the file size in brackets.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - addSizes.js

syntaxhighlighter
SyntaxHighlighter is here to help a developer/coder to post code snippets online with ease and have it look pretty. It’s 100% Java Script based and it doesn’t care what you have on your server.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - syntaxhighlighter

samaxesjs
samaxesJS is a set of utilities and controls, written in JavaScript, for building rich interactive web applications. The TOC control dynamically builds a table of contents from the headings in a document and prepends legal-style section numbers to each of the headings: adds numeration in front of all headings, generates an HTML table of contents, degrades gracefully if JavaScript is not available/enabled.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - samaxesjs

Step by Step
This script allows you to show and explain visitors what your page has for them. You might have encountered interactive demos created with screencasting and screengrabbing software that explain an interface to users in a step-by-step manner. This is exactly what this script does for web sites.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - Step by Step

MoreCSS
MoreCSS is a small, cross-browser compatible JavaScript library which enables you to create tab menus, tables and lists with “zebra”-style as if you were using regular CSS. It’s enough to include the library in HTML and use CSS for general purpose design elements.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - MoreCSS

Facelift Image Replacement
Facelift Image Replacement (or FLIR, pronounced fleer) is an image replacement script that dynamically generates image representations of text on your web page in fonts that otherwise might not be visible to your visitors. The generated image will be automatically inserted into your web page via Javascript and visible to all modern browsers. Any element with text can be replaced: from headers (h1, h2, etc.) to span-elements and everything in between!

Useful JavaScript Techniques - Facelift Image Replacement

CSS Sprites2
Cross-browser functionality is a bit of a freebie; jQuery works across most modern browsers, so everything you see here works in IE6+, Firefox, Safari, Opera, etc. We’ve also accounted for multiple graceful degradation scenarios.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - CSS Sprites2

jParralax
“Parallax is [a jQuery library that] turns a selected element into a ‘window’, or viewport, and all its children into absolutely positioned layers that can be seen through the viewport. These layers move in response to the mouse, and, depending on their dimensions (and options for layer initialisation), they move by different amounts, in a parallaxy kind of way.” Think of looking through a camera and having layers of objects at various distances moving around. This library achieves that effect using multiple using static images, one for each layer.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - jParralax

ddMenu - Context Menu Script
ddMenu is a simple MooTools-based script to create you’re own context menus. Press the Crtl-key and right click to switch between ddMenu and browser default context menu. Press the Shift-key and right click to open ddMenu beside the browser default context menu.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - ddMenu - Context Menu Script

js-hotkeys
jQuery.Hotkeys plugin lets you easily add and remove handlers for keyboard events anywhere in your code supporting almost any key combination. It takes one line of code to bind/unbind a hot key combination. Alternative approach.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - js-hotkeys

BarackSlideshow
An elegant, lightweight slideshow script. It works with MooTools 1.2, and supports all kinds of shape transformations (top and left coordinates, and height and width properties), which means it can now be used with vertical, horizontal, or even irregular lists.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - Proto.Menu, prototype based context menu

Galleria
Galleria is a javascript image gallery written in jQuery. It loads the images one by one from an unordered list and displays thumbnails when each image is loaded. It will create thumbnails for you if you choose so, scaled or unscaled, centered and cropped inside a fixed thumbnail box defined by CSS.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - Galleria

History Keeper
unFocus History Keeper is a JavaScript based library for managing browser history (back button) and providing support for deep linking for Flash and Ajax applications. It enables back button support, for client-side applications, has a hash-based deep linking (Anchor Style - index.html#foo=bar) and is event-driven - Subscriber pattern. Currently the script works well in all modern browsers.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - History Keeper

date.js
Datejs is an extensive open source JavaScript Date library for parsing, formatting and processing time and dates.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - date.js

Lightview
Lightview is another script that create modal windows on a web-site. It has a smart image preloading, adjustable rounded corners, without PNGs and content resizes to always fit on your screen. The script can be used for presentations, single images, Quicktime-files, Forms, Iframes, Inline content and Flash-files.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - Lightview

Coda popup bubbles

The software company Panic has a beloved Mac application for developers called Coda. Coda has an incredibly elegant design, and one of the subtle JavaScript effects that have been added to it is a stylized pop-up bubble. The blog jQuery for Designers has created a script that combines jQuery with custom code to replicate the feature used on the Coda website. The effect is subtle and elegant and greatly adds to the user’s experience.

Coda Bubble

ajax im
With the popularity of Web-based IM clients, like meebox, many developers want to add a JavaScript IM client of their own. Ajax IM is a library dedicated to creating an Ajax IM client that works out of the box. The script is a relatively large one, but it can be a nice effect for some websites that need more interaction with their users.

LiveValidation

This is a handy gem for any web developer who uses forms. Trying to create an intuitive sign-up form can be a chore with all the different types of validation that need to happen. Also, creating a faster, more intuitive form with JavaScript can be tricky, too. Thankfully, LiveValidation has taken the guesswork out of the process and created a tiny, unobtrusive script that can take the pain out of form validation. If you’re a Ruby on Rails developer, LiveValidation comes in two forms: either with Prototype (ideal for Ruby on Rails) or one that can be used as a stand-alone package.

Live Validation

Ajax AutoSuggest
Like TextboxList’s autocompletion script, Ajax AutoSuggest is a tasteful and refined autosuggest script. The script is quite tiny, weighing in at just under 9k, and adds a very nice touch to any search form.

Ajax Auto Suggest

FancyUpload
This is an upload script that shows the progress of files you are uploading. It’s perfect for any upload form and even allows for multiple uploads at the same time. You can limit the size of the uploaded file as well as restrict the type of file that can be uploaded. The only requirement that FancyUpload has is that your users have installed Flash, which has a 95% penetration among Web users.

Fancy Upload

Taggify
Taggify is a bit different in implementation than the other JavaScripts listed. Taggify is a hosted solution for adding pop-up widgets to photos. Instead of having to download a script and host it on your site, you can just add a tiny <include> in your tag, and you’ll have the power of Taggify installed on your site. Using Taggify is interesting; it adds notes and other useful information to photos.

Think of it as a souped-up version of the note-adding feature for Flickr images. You can add any HTML to the Taggify note, creating a nice informational page to accompany any image that needs a bit more explanation.

Taggify

AmberJack
AmberJack is one of the more interesting and compelling JavaScript techniques. Website tours are extremely beneficial because they can help familiarize users, showcase features and products, and many other things. Possibly the best part about AmberJack is that nothing has to be installed or learned to start creating website tours. AmberJack provides a way for website and product owners to quickly and easily create website tours with JavaScript. It’s an amazingly tiny download, at only 4 KB.

Sliding Tabs
This is another script inspired by Coda. Essentially, it’s a smooth-scrolling tab system that makes switching between panes easy and smart. You can see a demo of Sliding Tabs here. Sliding Tabs is built off of the JavaScript framework MooTools. Alternative solution.

JavaScript Image Loader
If you’re looking for a more intuitive way for users to upload and preview images on your website, the JavaScript Image Loader (demo) might fit the bill. The JavaScript Image Loader is a great way to show your users an image before it has uploaded, and it can also provide other information about the image if desired.

swfIR
swfIR is an interesting concept as it uses a combination of Flash and JavaScript and adds image manipulation functionality to it. Once swfIR is installed, it adds a <span> with the class “swfir” around the image. swfIR can add almost any manipulation to an image. An especially useful feature of the script is its ability to automatically resize images based on the size of the page. When you resize the text on the page, the image resizes proportionally with the layout. By resizing the picture along with the text, the design feels much more cohesive.

swfIR

MooFlow
For fans of Apple’s Cover Flow feature in Leopard, MooFlow is taken directly from Apple’s playbook. MooFlow is a JavaScript gallery script that uses MooTools and adds a bit of JavaScript magic to make beautiful image galleries, complete with a slider that mimics Cover Flow.

Just like with Cover Flow, you can manipulate MooFlow’s gallery layout and functionality. You can toggle full-screen mode, image reflection, and autoplay. MooFlow is quite configurable and easy to set up because it just grabs all of the images within an element.

MooFlow

amCharts
This script is a chart generator that runs off of a combination of flash and JavaScript. You can generate virtually any type of graph or chart with the script, and can even use .csv and xml files to pull the data from. With amCharts, you can generate graphs in the form of Column & Bar, Pie & Donut, Line & Area and Scatter & Bubble.

AM Charts

GreyBox
GreyBox’s website hails the JavaScript pop-up window as “A pop-up window that doesn’t suck,” and for good reason. GreyBox does everything that a modal window should do. It can display pictures, websites, and just about any other content you can think of.

Using GreyBox is incredibly easy because once you’ve included the JavaScript file in the header, the only thing left to configure is adding a <rel> tag to whatever element you want to display in the window.

Mailist
While Mailist isn’t a full-blown AJAX contact form, the tiny script is exactly what most Web developers need to quickly store email addresses for things like beta sign-ups and other expression-of-interest forms. It even has a back end for administering things like email backups and editing the look of the form.

SWFObject
SWFObject is a tiny little Flash player that uses JavaScript to overcome many of the obstacles that can’t be solved by markup alone. The player is a tiny download, only 9.5 KB (or 3.8 KB GZIP’ed). SWFObject prides itself on its compatibility with modern browsers, and it actually uses JavaScript to help detect which Flash player version to use and to avoid outdated Flash plug-ins that break Flash content.

SWF Object

PlotKit
PlotKit is a JavaScript chart-plotting script that relies on the tiny JavaScript framework Moochikit. PlotKit is an exceptional library for quickly plotting all sorts of graphs.

PlotKit

JavaScript tabifier
The JavaScript tabifier is a nifty little script that allows you to quickly and easily create tabs for your content. All that is required to use tabifier is to include the JavaScript and add a <div> with the class “tabber” surrounding the tabbed content, and then add the class “tabbertab” and the title for the <div> in what shows as the tab’s title. You can even use advanced techniques, such as adding cookies to the tabs, dynamically changing the tabs, and setting a default tab.

Tabifier

FancyZoom 1.1
Designed to view full-size photos and images inline without requiring a separate web page load, FancyZoom is providing a smooth, clean, truly Mac-like effect.

It is focused on a smoothest, polished zooming animation and automatically scales images from any image link, with no HTML changes. The script also preloads full-size images in the background on link mouseover and requires no Javascript libraries. FancyZoom requires only two lines of code in your HTML-files.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - FancyZoom 1.1

A Mac OS X-style Dock In JavaScript
Apple’s Mac OS X operating system is renowned for its fluid graphical effects. One impressive feature is the dock’s ‘fish-eye’ effect, whereby icons expand and contract as the mouse moves over them. Achieving this effect in JavaScript is difficult, but the MacStyleDock function allows this feature to be implemented easily.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - A Mac OS X-style Dock In JavaScript

fValidator - An open source (free) unobtrusive javascript tool for easy handling form validation
fValidator is an open source (free) unobtrusive javascript tool for easy handling form validation. It allows a user to more easily enter fixed width input where you would like them to enter the data in a certain format (dates,phone numbers, etc). Alternative jQuery Plugin.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - fValidator - An open source (free) unobtrusive javascript tool for easy handling form validation

jQuery Interactive Date Range Picker with Shortcuts
An advanced jQuery date picker that is optimized for quickly selecting a date from a list of preset dates/ranges, and we added smooth transitions when additional options are revealed.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - jQuery Interactive Date Range Picker with Shortcuts

Raphaël
Raphaël is a small JavaScript library that should simplify your work with vector graphics on the Web. In case you want to create your own specific chart or image crop-n-rotate widget, you can simply achieve it with this library. Raphaël uses SVG and VML as a base for graphics creation.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - Raphaël

NoGray Time Picker
This time picker utilizes a simple drag and drop interface. To select the time users can just drag the minutes or hour of a clock.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - NoGray Time Picker

Yetii - Yet (E)Another JavaScript Tab Interface
Yetii is a simple, yet functional tab interface implementation. It has lightweight, object-oriented code and degrades gracefully in browsers without JavaScript-support. You can have many independend tab interfaces on a single page, specify initial tab, turn on automatic tabs rotation, add next/previous navigation, nest one tab interface inside another and define custom function to run after certain tab is clicked.

You can link to certain tab on page A from page B via URL parameter and you can turn on tab persistence feature, so the most recently clicked tab is stored inside a cookie and remembered between page refresh.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - Yetii - Yet (E)Another JavaScript Tab Interface

Calendar
Calendar is a Mootools Javascript class that adds accessible and unobtrusive date-pickers to your form elements.It has highly configurable inputs and selects, multi-calendar support (with padding), variable navigation options and multi-lingual and fancy date formatting.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - Calendar

Starbox
Starbox allows you to easily create all kinds of rating boxes using just one PNG image. The library is build on top of the Prototype javascript framework. For some extra effects you can add Scriptaculous as well.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - Starbox

Magic Zoom
Magic Zoom is a JavaScript zoom tool. It’s the best way to display images in incredible detail. Users do not need to click anything - they just move their mouse over the image to see every detail of your product.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - Magic Zoom

Magic Magnify
Magic Magnify is a Flash zoom tool. It’s an elegant effect to view images with a magnifying-glass. Upon hover over the image, the user sees the close-up detail of the product. Price: $28 / £15 / €18.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - Magic Magnify

Carousel.us
Carousel.us is a Javascript 3D carousel, using either the prototype.js and scriptaculous.js or mootools.js frameworks. It also uses PHP Easy Reflections v3 by Richard Davey.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - Carousel.us

slideshow
Slideshow is a javascript class for Mootools 1.2 to stream and animate the presentation of images on your website. Slideshow is the result of many trials in code attempting to create a javascript class that was lightweight, unobtrusive, a snap to setup (but also highly configurable), extendable and - built using the javascript framework with the best effects - visually very impressive. Slideshow began as a side project by Aeron Glemann, and is now open source with an MIT-style license.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - slideshow

jgrousedoc
jGrouseDoc allows developers to produce documentation for their javascript code based on javadoc-like comments embedded into the source code. It allows documentation of classes, regardless what kind of library/technology was used to implement OOP. The script also allows documentation of multiple syntaxes that could be used to invoke a function/method. The output is customizable using CSS and Velocity templates or XSLT.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - jgrousedoc

Lightbox 2
Lightbox is a simple, unobtrusive script used to overlay images on the current page. It’s a snap to setup and works on all modern browsers.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - Lightbox 2

Control.Window
Control.Window is a fully programmable, multi purpose windowing toolkit for Prototype. It covers a wide variety of use cases and allows for a high degree of customization. It can attach to links to open the targets as windows, or can be filled with dynamic content. It includes support for stackable, draggable and resizable windows. Subclasses to handle Modal windows, LightBoxes and Tooltips are included.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - Control.Window

SimpleModal
SimpleModal is a lightweight jQuery plugin that provides a simple interface to create a modal dialog. The goal of SimpleModal is to provide developers with a cross-browser overlay and container that will be populated with data provided to SimpleModal.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - SimpleModal

Creating a carousel with MooTools
You’ve probably seen it on various websites: those neat little inline slideshows that browse you through a gallery of images (or content if you want, too). Most people simply copy the code to use it on their own site, but I believe that by making it yourself, you learn new techniques and gain new insight. Therefore I’ll walk you through this tutorial that teaches you how to achieve this through the use of CSS and MooTools.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - Creating a carousel with MooTools

Unobtrusive Expand and Collapse Navigation
A tutorial that displays how to to create a vertical navigation that will expand and collapse to show and hide sub-navigation using only unordered lists and as few class/id names as possible.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - Unobtrusive Expand and Collapse Navigation

Image Cross Fade Transition
Image rollovers were the staple JavaScript nugget of the 90s, and for a lot of JavaScript developers I know, one of the starting places their passion for JavaScript. Today, rollovers are a no-brainer - either in CSS or with the simplest of JavaScript. Today’s challenge is the rollover transition.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - Image Cross Fade Transition

Slider Gallery
This ‘product slider’ is similar to a straight forward gallery, except that there is a slider to navigate the items, i.e. the bit the user controls to view the items.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - Slider Gallery

FancyZoom meets jQuery // Ordered List // We Make The Web Beautifully Simple

Useful JavaScript Techniques - FancyZoom meets jQuery // Ordered List // We Make The Web Beautifully Simple

Build An AJAX Powered Shopping Cart
The goal of this tutorial is to show you how to build an AJAX powered shopping cart. However, it will not be production ready. The back end requirements vary from site to site far too much to write an effective tutorial. Instead, we are going to focus on the AJAX parts.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - Build An AJAX Powered Shopping Cart

jQuery iPod-style Drilldown Menu
“We created an iPod-style drilldown menu to help users traverse hierarchical data quickly and with control. It’s especially helpful when organizing large data structures that don’t translate well into traditional dropdown or fly-out menus.”

Useful JavaScript Techniques - jQuery iPod-style Drilldown Menu

Load Content While Scrolling With jQuery
This script allows to load the content “on the fly” - once th visitors has scrolled vertically to the end of the content block. “I always loved the dZone’s Ajax content loading while scrolling feature and created a similar one using jQuery.”

Useful JavaScript Techniques - Load Content While Scrolling With jQuery

JavaScript Tooltips
This tutorial describes how to create a nice, lightweight JavaScript tooltip. By Michael Leigeber.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - JavaScript Tooltips

Newsticker
Antonio Lupetti re-creates a news ticker which is similar to the one used on Newsvine. Mootools in use.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - Newsticker

jQuery virtual tour
This is an extension to the simple panorama viewer that allows you to play a little bit more with jQuery by adding interactivity to transform some panoramic views into a virtual tour.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - jQuery virtual tour

Flexigrid
Lightweight but rich data grid with resizable columns and a scrolling data to match the headers, plus an ability to connect to an xml based data source using Ajax to load the content. Similar in concept with the Ext Grid only its pure jQuery love, which makes it light weight and follows the jQuery mantra of running with the least amount of configuration.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - Flexigrid

tableFilter
This script allows users to filter and sort even large tables quickly and in an interactive way.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - tableFilter

Row Locking with Checkboxes
“I had my function set up so that if any part of the row was clicked, the checkbox would check. When I clicked the actual checkbox, it would show a checkmark, but since the checkbox is a part of that row, my function would run, too, which would then think it’s time to uncheck the checkbox. In a fraction of a second, it would look like the checkbox never checked, but the row changed color anyway, sending the wrong signals to the end user.”

Useful JavaScript Techniques - Row Locking with Checkboxes

jQuery File Tree
jQuery File Tree is a configurable, AJAX file browser plugin for jQuery. You can create a customized, fully-interactive file tree with as little as one line of JavaScript code. It has the ability to style icons based on file extension, uses AJAX to fetch file information on the fly, has a customizable expand/collapse event and support single- and multi-folder views.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - jQuery File Tree

Proto.Menu, prototype based context menu
Proto.Menu is a simple and lightweight prototype-based solution for context menu functionality on your page.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - Proto.Menu, prototype based context menu

Pricing Matrix
This tutorial explains how to create a matrix that would give an indication of relationships among the information provided.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - Proto.Menu, prototype based context menu

Toggling Announcement Slider
“A few of my customer have asked for me to create a subtle but dynamic (…I know…) way for them to advertise different specials on their website. Not something that would display on every page, but periodically or only the homepage. Using a trick from GoDaddy’s playbook, I put together an announcement slider that toggles on click. Thanks to MooTools 1.2, this was a breeze.”

Useful JavaScript Techniques - Proto.Menu, prototype based context menu

Tutorials

Show/hide a Login Panel using Mootools 1.2
“Some of you were wondering what script I used to show/hide the login panel on top of this page (or in my latest Wordpress theme: “Night Transition”). In this tutorial, we will see how to create a similar login/signup panel for your website using Mootools 1.2.”

Images slider to create Flickr-like slideshows
If you like Flickr slideshow, this article explains how to implement it using Prototype-UI framework. “Since long time I was looking for a simple way to implement a Flickr-like slideshow (”image carousel”) and finally I found a good compromise between complexity and result to implement it using Prototype-UI, an awesome JavaScript framework based on Prototype and Scriptaculous.”

Create an apple style menu and improve it via jQuery
“Since I wrote my last tutorial on how to create a CSS only multilevel dropdown menu I got a lot of visitors who wanted to know how I created the main navigation of kriesi.at. (a so called kwicks menu) The interest in extraordinary menus seems to be high nowadays, so today I will teach you how this is done.”

Useful JavaScript Techniques - Create an apple style menu and improve it via jQuery

Creating a Slick Auto-Playing Featured Content Slider
By Chris Coyier.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - Creating a Slick Auto-Playing Featured Content Slider

Build An Incredible Login Form With jQuery
One struggle that still remains today in web design is displaying all of the redundant information on every page. For example, a login form. What if there was a way to easily make the content accessible on every page, but keep it hidden until needed? Well you can, by making a top panel that when clicked, will reveal its self and its content. But we need to make this look nice, so we’ll also animate it

Useful JavaScript Techniques - Build An Incredible Login Form With jQuery

Create a Slick Tabbed Content Area using CSS & jQuery
“One of the biggest challenge to web designers is finding ways to place a lot of information on a page without losing usability. Tabbed content is a great way to handle this issue and has been widely used on blogs recently. Today we’re going to build a simple little tabbed information box in HTML, then make it function using some simple Javascript, and then finally we’ll achieve the same thing using the jQuery library.”

Useful JavaScript Techniques - Create a Slick Tabbed Content Area using CSS & jQuery

Create a Simple, Intelligent Accordion Effect Using Prototype and Scriptaculous
Learn how to create a lightweight, intelligent “accordion” effect using the Prototype and Scriptaculous libraries.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - Create a Simple, Intelligent Accordion Effect Using Prototype and Scriptaculous

Create a Simple, Powerful Product Highlighter with MooTools
This tutorial will help you find your inner cow by introducing you to one of the most powerful and modular javascript libraries—MooTools. You’ll create a flexible tool for highlighting your sites products or services using the MooTools javascript framework.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - Create a Simple, Powerful Product Highlighter with MooTools

Creating a Dynamic Poll with jQuery and PHP
When you combine some neat functionality courtesy of PHP with the cleverness of jQuery you can produce some pretty cool results. In this tutorial we’ll create a poll using PHP and XHTML, then make use of some jQuery Ajax effects to eliminate the need for a page refresh, and to give it a nice little bit of animation.

Useful JavaScript Techniques - Creating a Dynamic Poll with jQuery and PHP

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Verizon Tech Made 5,000 Sex Chat Calls On Customer Accounts [Verizon]

11 Sep

The next time you're disputing a 900 number call to a sex hotline and the CSR tells you nobody else could have made that call, remind them of this story. Over the past 10 months, a Verizon technician made 5,000 calls to sex chat hotlines, totaling 45,000 minutes of dirty talk at a cost of $220,000. He placed the calls from over 950 tapped residential and commercial accounts throughout Bergen county in New Jersey. He has since resigned, and been charged with theft by deception and theft of services.

Joseph R. Vaccarelli worked for Verion for 10 years but only started making the calls within the last 10 months, which makes us wonder what exactly happened last November or December to make him launch his non-stop telephone orgy of fraud—and how he got any work done during that time.

Verizon would like everyone to know that not all of its employees regularly call phone sex hotlines and charge the fees to customer accounts:

"We believe this was a highly isolated incident by an errant individual," Young said. "It should not reflect on the overwhelming majority of our workforce, who bring pride and respect to their jobs every day."

"Verizon Worker Charged in 5,000 Illicit Sex Calls" [redOrbit] (Thanks to skokieguy!)
(Photo: ernop)


 
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Want More Than One Account On Your ‘Spore’ Game? Buy Another Copy [EA Games]

11 Sep

EA's DRM spyware on the long-awaited game Spore turns out to have an added side-effect: if you live in a household with multiple players, you all have to share the same account. The game's manual says otherwise, but after repeated queries on the EA forum, a company spokesperson confirmed this. That's right—if you're in a household with several potential Spore players, and you want each of them to have their own account, you will have to buy multiple copies of the game.

From page 52 of the manual:

You may have multiple Spore accounts for each installation of the game.

However, here's what "EA_violet" wrote on the EA forums in response to complaints that players couldn't set up multiple accounts:

That section in the manual was a misprint and will be corrected in future printings of the manual. There is one Spore registration/account per game/serial code so you are correct in that you cannot make multiple accounts at this time.

We're among all those people who waited a long time for Spore to come out, and we're facepalming at how broken it is, all thanks to EA's misguided DRM implementation. This particular detail is notable for revealing that at some point in the past it was likely that the game allowed multiple accounts, and that this functionality was removed in order to tighten the DRM net.

forum.spore.com (Thanks to Sir Mildred Pierce!)
(Spore creature: Henjoness)


 
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Anti-Corruption Posters

11 Sep

via http://www.anthonyburrill.com/anti_corruption.html

 
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Radical Transparency: Three Lessons Apple Can Learn from Google

11 Sep
Steve Rubel via Micro Persuasion shared by 6 people

Google isn't exactly known as the most transparent company in the world, but they're light years ahead of Apple - a company that in some ways they share a kinship with when it comes to their reputation for innovation. Apple (or for that matter any big company) can learn a lot about radical transparency, customer service and PR from Google, even though they're hardly perfect here.

First, Google does a great job of telling you where they're fallible. Many Google products have pages that list the bugs that they know need to be fixed. GMail and Google Docs are just two. You can visit each of these pages for an update and even let Google know if you're experiencing one of these issues.

Knownissues

Apple, by contrast, just lets you know when they've fixed bugs, but leave it to bloggers to dig into the code to see just what was fixed. Most Apple software update release notes from Apple simply say "Bug fixes."

Iphone201080804

Second, Google, like Apple, has forums where users can voice their opinions about new features, gripes, wishes, use cases and more. Google employees actively participate in these forums and you can track their activity. Here's a page that shows you all of the posts that a Google Reader forum guide, "Roger," has responded to. Apple does the same in its forums. Here's a list of all of the postings that Jason L has responded to.

However, the difference between the two is that users can rank the posts of Google employees or even report misconduct. I give credit to Apple for participating, however, I wished they would let users rate employee postings.

Roger

Finally, Google has a ton of blogs. Most of them link back to the bloggers who link there. Some are beginning to allow for comments. Google Blogoscoped aggregates them here. Even better, all Google blog posts clearly identify the employee who authored the post and their title.

Daniel

Apple meanwhile has one blog for its much troubled MobileMe services, which I am probably dignifying by calling it that. It's bascially a news feed of product updates. The authors aren't identified. Worse, there are no comments or links to other bloggers.

There are other companies in the tech industry that go even further than Google in their transparency - namely Dell and Microsoft (an Edelman client). However, Google and Apple are often closely linked in their cultures. The reality is, though, that when it comes to customer engagement, they are quite different.

 
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This appears to be a higher-level BoA credit … [Bank Of America]

11 Sep

This appears to be a higher-level BoA credit card services number where a real person picks up in just a few rings and is actually competent and help you out with your requests: 800-792-9008


 
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$22,000 T-Rex Skeleton Is Worth the Cost of Taking the Bus [Dinosaurs]

11 Sep

Truth: the kids in the neighborhood will be unimpressed by your shiny new Corolla, even if it takes 4 years of monthly payments for you to actually own it. So buy something cool instead. Standing 13 feet tall and spreading 25 feet long, this animated T-Rex features 6 deadly-skeleton-like movements along with a roar that will force Ben Stiller into early retirement. Just check out the video:

Sorry, but the T-Rex does not come in periwinkle. Toyota still has you there. [Scare Factory via Nerd Approved]


 
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Harvest

11 Sep

"Harvest"
 
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Microsoft Offers a Sneak Peek at Your Neighbor’s PC

11 Sep

Windows StatsNerds love to know how other nerds use their PCs. To give you a glimpse of what your fellow nerds are doing, Microsoft has released some (anonymous, but revealing) details about Windows users gleaned from the company’s Windows Feedback Program. The goal is to use the data to improve the coming Windows 7, but the figures reveal some interesting facts on their own.

Judging by the graphic above, images are overwhelmingly the most common file on your average Windows machine. However, the chart above is perhaps most notable for what it doesn’t show — music and video files. In fact, other than a passing mention of HD video, Microsoft never even acknowledges media files in the stats.

The other thing that jumps out from these statistics is that I’m not alone in my dislike of the “My Pictures” folder. It’s hard to tell exactly how many of us dislike “My Pictures,” but clearly we’re in the majority — spaces in folder names are bad, mkay?

But interesting trivia aside, the real goal is to improve Windows 7 and in that case the far more revealing statistic is that the vast majority of users with high screen resolution displays (1600×1200 or better) are adjusting their resolution down to 1024×768. Why pay for the pixels if you aren’t going to use them?

The Windows 7 blog admits that the loss of fidelity at higher resolutions makes “reading text in editors and web browsers difficult.” The post promises that in the near future “the Windows Desktop Graphics team will describe what we have done with that information to improve display quality and reading comfort in Windows 7.”

We’ll be sure to let you know when the graphics team offers their insights.

See Also:

 
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Great Photography by Dave Hill + Quick Tutorial | Abduzeedo – graphic design | design inspiration | design tutorials

11 Sep

via http://abduzeedo.com/great-photography-dave-hill-quick-tutorial

 
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