Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 27. Chapters: XUL, Morfik, EMML, ZK, XForms, Extensible Application Markup Language, List of user interface markup languages, Vector Markup Language, Comparison of user interface markup languages, HTML Application, OpenLaszlo, User Interface Modeling, Glade Interface Designer, XFrames, MXML, TUIX, UIML, KaXUL, XML User Interface, XML Resource, XMLGUI, EXtensible Server Pages, VTML, UsiXML, DisplayML, Luxor. Excerpt: Morfik Technology Pty Ltd., an Australian company, is the developer of Morfik, a set of visual designers, compilers and a Framework combined in an Integrated development environment (IDE) aimed at developing Ajax applications in a high-level language such as Java, C#, BASIC or Object Pascal. Morfik includes visual design tools for Web interfaces, database structure, and queries. It supports the classic client-server model, however like all Ajax applications, the client-side code runs within a browser. The Morfik development tool converts the forms that the user draws into DHTML, compiles the client-logic into JavaScript, and builds the application and database server engines to house the server-side code. Morfik Technology was a privately-funded company that was founded in 2000 in Hobart, Tasmania by Aram Mirkazemi and Shahram Besharati. The company later (2009) moved to Sydney, New South Wales, before being acquired by Altium Limited in November 2010. In September 2005, it demonstrated a pre-beta version of its flagship product, Morfik at the Web 2.0 Conference. Morfik was a major sponsor of this conference . Rumors spread just prior to the conference that Robert Scoble, Microsoft's lead evangelist, thought that Microsoft should buy Morfik, however, this was quickly laid to rest by Scoble himself. At the conference, Morfik showed how web applications could be designed for both online as well as offline use, via its '...