In 1996 when no one believed in Apple and AOL was voted most likely to succeed, Netscape took its shiny, new JavaScript language from the browser and stuck it in the Netscape Enterprise HTTP server.
In the first installment of a new web series, Google’s Martin Splitt explains how the search engine indexes JavaScript sites. Splitt’s new web series is dedicated to SEO and JavaScript and is ...
JavaScript could be the most widely used programming language in the world, but for many developers, its modern version looks very different from what they first learned. With the advent of ECMAScript ...