You are lost when you are waiting on IE6 to get ready for new
features ;-)
There is a streaming implementation of comet. Maybe it supports your
needs.
http://code.google.com/p/gwt-comet/
Stefan Bachert
http://gwtworld.de
On Jul 2, 8:35 pm, Fendy Tjin <fendyt...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Thank you for the reply. But server push does not seem practical when
> we can't flush the HTTP connection. Although they did explain how to
> overcome it, however I require the HTTP connection to stay alive for I
> will use it for a live graph presentation (similar to the stock graph
> in yahoo finance.)
>
> I would like to know has every browser in fact support HTML5 already?
> I think most of the users in the world are still using browsers with
> HTML4 (Internet Explorer).
>
> Thank you,
> Fendy Tjin
>
> On Jul 2, 10:49 pm, Stefan Bachert <stefanbach...@yahoo.de> wrote:
>
> > Hi,
>
> > there are some ways.
>
> > The buzz words are comet, server push, long poll.
> > These techniques are requesting values from the server, but the server
> > only fulfills the requests when datas are available.
> > The effect is, the client will wait until the server has data.
>
> > With HTML5 is WebSockets coming. This is a regular bidirectional link
> > between client and server.
>
> > Neither of these technologies needs a timer, not even "long polling"
>
> > Stefan Bacherthttp://gwtworld.de
>
> > On Jul 2, 11:25 am, Fendy Tjin <fendyt...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > > Is there a way to automatically refresh the client side when ever
> > > there are changes in the database without the timer on the client side.
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