Channel Register

Comments on: Cross industry AJAX group reaches IE 8 'consensus'

Another group corrupted. 

Posted Friday 28th March 2008 23:03 GMT

Flame

Microsoft joined the group "for feedback" but it looks like things pushed the other way. M$_support tags OK, ignoring W3C methods OK. Is there anything Microsoft could to break standards that this OpenAJAX group would find fault with?

trojan horse team 

Posted Sunday 30th March 2008 12:09 GMT

Black Helicopters

I couldn't agree more and I got a little insight into the way it works when I recently read the blog of the guy who let MS into the OLPC and showed them how it all works, so that they can put XP on it and extinguish Sugar.

Basically, they send really nice guys who know what they are talking about, and who probably genuinely have really good intentions. Unfortunately, those guys are the trojan horse.

MS buying votes, what a surprise! 

Posted Sunday 30th March 2008 16:51 GMT

Jobs Horns

"Microsoft has worked hard to increase it credibility with the AJAX community since it joined the OpenAjax Alliance. "

ie. has been busy paying voting shills.

Results can be seen: Those who have been paid, are pro-MS, those haven't, are against.

Majority obviously have been paid. Identical method to that used in OOXML case and obviously the editor is too pro-MS to notice anything weird happening, unlike ther main site editors. Another paid shill?

cross-domain communications ?? 

Posted Monday 31st March 2008 08:47 GMT

Stop

They must be kidding!

Why would anyone want to promote a system that works across multiple domains? And why report on it using the word 'security' in the same sentence?

If this is the way AJAX is going, bring on the browsers that have blocking AJAX as a feature. - Yes, I know browsers already block the scripts and I hope that many more join those who already block cross-domain communications.

I need to go and read the HTML5 spec again and remind myself about accessibility requirements. Last time I looked, accessibility was a legal requirement in many countries. Time to put AJAX back onto the intranet where it belongs.