It's not that difficult.
I have a fully AJAX-ified site: http://www.f1almanah.com/ which uses
history, and can accept links too.
>From what i've seen in your site, you can do that within 30 minutes...

On Dec 19, 5:41 pm, Xeoncross <[email protected]> wrote:
> Thanks for the comment!
>
> Yes, I have been fighting with the whole "to use URI hashes, or not to
> use URI hashes.. That is the question!" I worked with Harald's script
> but I decided that trying to figure out a hash system for a site with
> lots of pages might be to hard to manage. It's fine for photogalleries
> or AJAX tabs - but not a full site with lots of pages and stuff.
>
> Google would have one URL to the page - and the users would have
> another url (with a hash) to another page. I don't think that would
> work.
>
> I was actually thinking of placing a "location/address" bar up at the
> top that told the REAL page URL.
>
> Indecently, why doesn't JS allow a site to change the URL? I
> understand that phishing could take rise - but just limit the change
> to the current site (the same way we handle cookies) That would keep
> badsite.com from changing the URL to chase.com.
>
> This is the biggest thing I see for JS right now - here we want to
> break out of the old fashion HTTP requests - but the browsers won't
> let us! We would save so much bandwidth just sending partial pages
> (most on my site are 2-5kb).

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