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The goal of this blog entry is to describe how you can create HTML5 Offline Web Applications when building ASP.NET web applications. I describe the method that I used to create an offline Web application when building the JavaScript Reference application. You can read about the HTML5 Offline Web Application standard by visiting the following links: Currently, the HTML5 Offline Web Applications feature works with all modern browsers with one important exception. You can use Offline Web Applications with Firefox, Chrome, and Safari (including iPhone Safari). Unfortunately, however, Internet Explorer does not support Offline Web Applications (not even IE 9). http://stephenwalther.com/archive/2011/01/26/creating-html5-offline-web-applications-with-asp-net.aspx

Creating HTML5 Offline Web Applications with ASP.NET

Everything you need in one place, not hundreds of plug-ins Kendo UI has all the tools you need in a unified, tested, and supported framework. It lets you focus on building your app, not on building (and supporting) a “framework” out of hundreds of unsupported plug-ins and libraries. http://www.kendoui.com/web.aspx

jQuery UI widgets | Kendo UI

http://plugins.jquery.com/project/saveit There are two methods in this plugin. They are .saveit() and .loadit(). Here's how they work. Saveit! The .saveit() method is very simple; just call it on the element containing the data you want to save, like so:

Local Storage.

http://dojotoolkit.org/api/1.5/dojox/storage Welcome to the Dojo Toolkit API documentation. You are browsing version 1.5 of the Dojo Toolkit. Use the selector to the left to change versions.

dojox.storage