[jQuery] Re: Any Fortune 500 using the Google Ajax Hosting?

2008-11-25 Thread Bil Corry
Bil Corry wrote on 9/9/2008 11:43 AM: Google, on the other hand, doesn't use the Expires header, they instead use the Last-Modified header. This means that instead of the browser just outright using the cached jQuery library, it first has to ask Google if the file has been modified for

[jQuery] Re: Any Fortune 500 using the Google Ajax Hosting?

2008-11-25 Thread Karl Swedberg
thanks for reporting that, Bil. I'm sure a lot of people will be happy to hear that! --Karl Karl Swedberg www.englishrules.com www.learningjquery.com On Nov 25, 2008, at 6:59 PM, Bil Corry wrote: Bil Corry wrote on 9/9/2008 11:43 AM: Google, on the other hand, doesn't use

[jQuery] Re: Any Fortune 500 using the Google Ajax Hosting?

2008-09-09 Thread Bil Corry
rcherny wrote on 9/9/2008 7:36 AM: Hey, I'm implementing jQuery for a fairly large company, and was asked by their team if we knew if anyone in the Fortune 500 was using the Google Ajax hosting: http://code.google.com/apis/ajaxlibs/ They have some IT issues which are preventing proper server

[jQuery] Re: Any Fortune 500 using the Google Ajax Hosting?

2008-09-09 Thread rcherny
Hey Bill, thanks for the response. I don't recommend the Google AJAX hosting to my clients.  Here's why: the jQuery library is small to begin with, so we're not talking about saving oodles of bandwidth, and if you set the Expires header to expire in a year, then the browser will only