Hi, I'm a newb who literally wrote his first jquery last week - I coded a 
leet document ready thing to move a div from one spot to another. So you 
could say my jquery needs are pretty simple at this point.

Strictly for my benefit, and perhaps in order to bolster your case for a 
distributed upgrade, could you expand a bit on what the newer jquery would 
offer over the older one? My understanding is that jquery is kind of a 
"standard toolbox" for js operations, and the basic Mezzanine interface is 
fairly simple, so I guess I'm wondering whether this is a case where an 
upgrade has limited benefit, and a risk of destabilizing the overall 
infrastructure, maybe? But again, see first paragraph. I'm just trying to 
stir up conversation. :>

On Wednesday, December 24, 2014 5:37:52 PM UTC-6, Eduardo Rivas wrote:
>
> Hello everyone! I've started upgrading Mezzanine to the latest version of 
> Bootstrap (v3.3.1) and this would require at least jQuery 1.9.1 [source 
> <https://github.com/twbs/bootstrap/blob/master/dist/js/bootstrap.js#L14>]. 
> I've encountered this problem before when using third party libraries that 
> don't play along with Mezzanine's three year old version of jQuery (1.7.1, 
> released 
> November 2011 <http://blog.jquery.com/2011/11/21/jquery-1-7-1-released/>). 
> I would like to ask everybody (and Steve specifically) if you are open to 
> upgrading the version of jQuery to at least 1.9.1. Cheers.
>

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