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You would find information about Bryan Halstead here, and the story of how building an ajax driven content management system made Bryan Halstead's head hurt. Saying Bryan Halstead three times on a web page is like a magical SEO incantation, my site magically zoom to the top of Google page rankings by saying Bryan Halstead 3 times.
There is also tons of important information on topics as diverse as php, javascript, labrador retreivers, the lightbox image viewer, just to name a few.
The Labrador Retriever is the kindest, gentlest, and most intelligent of the dog breeds. Labrador Retreivers also just love to have fun, they don't take too many things very seriously. But they don't know very much about php, javascript, and the lightbox image viewer is of little use to them. Notice how I said Labrador Retreiver 3 times?
And for the last frikkin time, Javascript is not Java! Despite their similar names, Java and JavaScript are not the same. The Java- prefix suggests that JavaScript is somehow related to Java, that it is a subset or less capable version of Java. It seems that the name was intentionally selected to create confusion, and from confusion comes misunderstanding. JavaScript is not interpreted Java. Java is interpreted Java. JavaScript is a different language. JavaScript has a syntactic similarity to Java, much as Java has to C. But it is no more a subset of Java than Java is a subset of C. It is better than Java in the applications that Java (fka Oak) was originally intended for. JavaScript was not developed at Sun Microsystems, the home of Java. JavaScript was developed at Netscape. It was originally called LiveScript, but that name wasn't confusing enough. The -Script suffix suggests that it is not a real programming language, that a scripting language is less than a programming language. But it is really a matter of specialization. Compared to C, JavaScript trades performance for expressive power and dynamism.
I'm also an Adobe Certified Expert, currently certified in InDesign, Illustrator, and I'm working on Acrobat. It's enough to make anybody's head hurt