The CSJS or Client Side Javascript is the code that tells your browser what to do in addition to simply formatting the screen with what is on a web page. You see it every day: opening popup windows, making images change when your mouse rolls over them and reading and writing cookies.
All of these toys work in ie 4+ and ns 4x; there is no ns 5. Some of them don't work in Netscape
6+, which is actually a version of the Mozilla 5 open source browser. If they
don't work, they won't hurt your computer; you will just see a blank screen.
Programmers had so much trouble getting neat stuff to work in both ie and
ns that they forgot to add an additional code fork for "according to
standards." You see, Microsoft browsers supported anti-Netscape and standard
ways to do things, but Netscape 4x only supported anti-Microsoft; when Netscape
bailed on the browser war, they went with a completely different "standards"
browser and seemed to forget all about ns 4x backward compatibility. Now,
to work in all browsers, the very fancy stuff must work in the "standard"
way, sometimes the ie 4x way, and always in the ns 4x way. This reality can
require so much code that the really cool stuff isn't practical in download
time alone until the level 4x browsers all disappear. These toys can be fixed,
but toys will be fixed last.
View Demo's: Awesomely
Active Clock, Cool
Bar Clock, Ants!
Try to kill them!, Two
for one Click.
Flash demos
Javascript demos
Graphics, image effects & cartoons
Support Artists for
digital photography,
image editing, prints &
wallpaper downloads
McPhinn Labs for
sound editing demos & downloads
Cliff's Notes for humor and opinion
Cheep Chick - for social observation
