Christian Heilmann lays out seven rules to better unobtrusive JavaScript, including not making assumptions about JavaScript, the browser and the document. Work with structured markup. If you are traversing a document, maybe there's a solution that can take advantage of CSS's selector mechanism instead. Work with browsers and users. Better understanding of events, and playing nice with namespace, scope, and patterns. And of course, think about the next developer, so keep the code maintainable.
Christian Heilmann offers another incremental improvement to the Module Pattern, and calls it the Revealing Module Pattern. This defines an anonymous object that contains a list of methods and properties that are publicly available. Christian notes that this method also allows you to set up a public property that's privately generated by a method. Christian's improvement makes it quickly clear which properties and methods are public.
Christian Heilmann compares the Object Literal to Douglas Crockford's Module pattern and finds that the Module pattern fixes a major problem of the object literal - the difficult choice of using this or fully qualified references to functions in the same block. Christian also covers the improvements in the Module Pattern, like the decluttering of the return block, which makes the resulting a little easier to work with.