March 2007
![](http://blogmarks.net/screenshots/2007/03/27/fd799e39ac62c086e28e287768dd2853.png)
xMDB viewer - personal Ajax movie database
![](http://blogmarks.net/img/default-gravatar.gif)
![](http://blogmarks.net/screenshots/2007/03/27/fd799e39ac62c086e28e287768dd2853.png)
xMDB viewer - personal Ajax movie database
![](http://blogmarks.net/img/default-gravatar.gif)
January 2007
![](http://blogmarks.net/screenshots/2007/01/11/d9583bf1ed6db503e8d5d86aa177803b.png)
W3schools (eng)
![](http://blogmarks.net/avatar?url=http%3A%2F%2Ftiger.storm.free.fr%2Fzodiac-tigre.png)
October 2006
August 2006
May 2006
![](http://blogmarks.net/screenshots/2006/05/31/e8d95d1bf9daaa1da08de3d72adb815f.png)
Consuming Amazon's Web API Directly with Javascript (via JSON and XSLT)
Amazon.com's Web API is a cool piece of architecture, but one of its big limitations is the difficulty involved in getting Amazon's data straight to the browser.
Well, here's how to fix that problem (for Amazon.com's API at least), using Amazon's free XSLT transformation service, the JSON output format, and a bit of plain old javascript. The examples below show you how to use javascript (and a bit of XSL) to place live Amazon.com data - direct from Amazon's servers - on any web page.
April 2006
February 2006
![](http://blogmarks.net/screenshots/2007/01/08/fdc629a7155a528654b0b8a8ecd0cb2b.png)
Google AJAXSLT
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December 2005
October 2005
July 2005
June 2005
![](http://blogmarks.net/screenshots/2007/01/08/fdc629a7155a528654b0b8a8ecd0cb2b.png)
Google AJAXSLT
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