I thought for sure at one point there was examples of this, but I'm failing to find them. I was at NCDevCon this week, and the subject of "lazy loading" came up. That, and offloading everything to memory. But the summation being, that things like Facebook shove a bunch of stuff down on the first request (sprites, text, menu), and then load columns and other items after your browser has started to render the framework of the site.
I've got a problem child ecomm site that needs some lovin'. And if it were just this site, I'd let it go. But I've got an even higher volume version rolling out in the next few months, so it needs to be addressed now. I was wondering if there's a way to render the typical <skin:pagination> calls using ajax as things presently stand? That'd at least show the page and the spinning graphic to (hopefully) keep more eyeballs on the site. That, and maybe a call to bring in just the first 3 results, then ajax the rest in after a full page load, but mostly I'm just concerned with the pagination being ajax'd at present. Any thoughts? -- Matthew Williams Geodesic GraFX matthewwilliams.geodesicgrafx.com/blog twitter.com/ophbalance -- You received this message cos you are subscribed to "farcry-dev" Google group. To post, email: [email protected] To unsubscribe, email: [email protected] For more options: http://groups.google.com/group/farcry-dev -------------------------------- Follow us on Twitter: http://twitter.com/farcry
