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Donnie WalkerFlag for United States of America

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How would I make clickable, animated bubbles bouncing on the screen?

I'm looking for a solution (other than Flash) to have a bunch of clickable bubbles that bounce on the screen and move based on the mouse movement. I've heard that jquery might be capable of this.

I'm looking for any suggestions or solutions. Thanks,
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Badotz
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Where else have you looked for this type of effect?
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ASKER

I'm googling right now and looking thru the jquery.com plugin site.
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sh0e

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Searching, I received 94,000 results for:

javascript animation bubbles

Surely there is someething in that list you could use (or learn from)?
It doesn't have to be bubbles. I am looking for a gallery script that has the thumbnails as bouncing balls, bubbles, etc.

I do not know javascript or jquery. I don't want to use Flash. I am looking for a solution.
>>I do not know javascript or jquery. I don't want to use Flash. I am looking for a solution.

What, exactly, does that mean?
I am looking for code that does what I asked for in the question.
Do you want someone to write it for you?
Since you state that "I do not know javascript or jquery. I don't want to use Flash. I am looking for a solution.", one can only guess that you require a pre-written, cross-browser, fully-debugged plugin.

But if you don't understand the underlying technology, how in the world will you ever get anything to work?
this place sucks
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No comment from the Asker, a "solution" is accepted without a word of how it helped or - heaven forbid - a word of thanks.; this is unsatisfying on every level.

EE is a site where Askers and Experts communicate, bashing things about, until an agreement is made: either there is a solution, a workaround is found or some other conclusion is reached.

Regardless, there is dialogue, constant dialogue. Except in cases like this, where the Asker just lurks in the background.

(sigh) Perhaps I expect too much from the Askers. Still, common courtesy dictates that one at least say thank-you when someone provides one a service. Further elaboration on how the solution worked is gravy: not required, but always welcomed.
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