jQuery More Content Plugin Demos

Controls:

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Integer mattis eget magna quis tempus. Sed rutrum ornare arcu non auctor. Suspendisse eu bibendum lacus. Sed pulvinar, lacus sed facilisis aliquet, quam nisi fermentum erat, vel vestibulum magna quam in mi. Vivamus sapien odio, cursus ac sagittis et, molestie non turpis. Mauris fringilla, enim a vehicula dictum, leo nunc lobortis dolor, ut consectetur mauris risus sit amet mauris. Sed posuere id diam ac volutpat. Duis at fringilla magna, pharetra accumsan neque.

Sed feugiat ac diam a placerat. Nam nulla diam, maximus ut luctus eu, pretium sit amet mi. Sed a consectetur quam, et placerat nulla. Nam finibus ex dolor, ac gravida massa egestas nec. Duis pulvinar lacinia hendrerit. Sed vehicula vulputate nisl, quis molestie tellus egestas et. Vivamus nisi magna, pulvinar ac imperdiet eget, feugiat sit amet justo. Nullam imperdiet elit eu mauris bibendum rhoncus. Integer pulvinar facilisis tellus semper venenatis. Donec auctor tempus justo quis eleifend.

Fusce sollicitudin sollicitudin porta. Mauris volutpat vitae ante nec laoreet. Suspendisse condimentum dolor at diam placerat euismod. Aenean mattis mauris varius, imperdiet nulla efficitur, finibus risus. Cras luctus nulla ac egestas consectetur. Suspendisse pretium nulla sit amet nisl rhoncus, hendrerit bibendum turpis rutrum. Sed ultricies molestie porttitor. Duis consectetur aliquam purus, in eleifend lorem. Fusce facilisis nulla vel iaculis cursus. Fusce blandit suscipit tincidunt. Suspendisse ultrices vulputate urna. Cras tristique lacinia neque, eu consectetur nisi hendrerit eget. Nullam in malesuada metus. Nunc sit amet iaculis ex, vulputate maximus mi.

Nulla id eros sed lacus tincidunt facilisis. Pellentesque at blandit metus. Aliquam vitae vehicula quam. Duis velit libero, dictum sed enim non, accumsan tempor justo. Nulla non semper nunc, sit amet vehicula augue. Vivamus egestas cursus orci, vel pretium purus dictum id. Nulla eu interdum erat, nec mollis metus. Vestibulum ante ipsum primis in faucibus orci luctus et ultrices posuere cubilia Curae; In hac habitasse platea dictumst. Etiam quis arcu id ante pellentesque aliquam in sit amet velit. Praesent fermentum sodales erat, ac varius turpis pretium a. Nam ac sodales justo.

In ultricies nulla arcu, eget ultricies massa bibendum vel. Donec quis ante lorem. Suspendisse semper mi ut euismod vestibulum. Suspendisse facilisis elementum turpis ut dictum. Aenean magna justo, congue vel maximus ac, porta vitae ipsum. Pellentesque aliquet, eros id condimentum vestibulum, ligula mauris imperdiet metus, eu hendrerit leo ligula et nulla. Mauris massa risus, malesuada ut convallis sit amet, maximus id velit. Nunc tincidunt quam ut consequat imperdiet. Curabitur vel lectus dapibus, congue erat vel, pellentesque eros. Praesent cursus fringilla erat nec tincidunt. Sed vel arcu dignissim, rutrum est eu, molestie felis.

Example #2

In 1993, the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA), a unit of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, released NCSA Mosaic, the first popular graphical Web browser, which played an important part in expanding the growth of the nascent World Wide Web beyond the NeXTSTEP niche where the WorldWideWeb had formed three years earlier. In 1994, a company called Mosaic Communications was founded in Mountain View, California and employed many of the original NCSA Mosaic authors to create Mosaic Netscape. However, it intentionally shared no code with NCSA Mosaic. The internal codename for the company's browser was Mozilla, a portmanteau of "Mosaic and Godzilla"[14] . The first version of the Web browser, Mosaic Netscape 0.9, was released in late 1994. Within four months it had already taken three-quarters of the browser market and became the main web browser for the 1990s. To avoid trademark ownership problems with the NCSA, the browser was subsequently renamed Netscape Navigator in the same year, and the company took the name Netscape Communications. Netscape Communications realized that the Web needed to become more dynamic. Marc Andreessen, the founder of the company, believed that HTML needed a "glue language" that was easy to use by Web designers and part-time programmers to assemble components such as images and plugins, where the code could be written directly in the Web page markup.

In 1995, Netscape Communications recruited Brendan Eich with the goal of embedding the Scheme programming language into its Netscape Navigator.[15] Before he could get started, Netscape Communications collaborated with Sun Microsystems to include in Netscape Navigator Sun's more static programming language Java, in order to compete with Microsoft for user adoption of Web technologies and platforms.[16] Netscape Communications then decided that the scripting language they wanted to create would complement Java and should have a similar syntax, which excluded adopting other languages such as Perl, Python, TCL, or Scheme.