Andy Hume whittles away the various JavaScript libraries to produce a clear explanation of event delegation and how it works. Its a technique that reduces the number of event listeners attached to the document by attaching just one event listener to a container element. He presents a simple code example and talks about the benefits of event delegation, including performance and code maintenance. (Includes workarounds for IE and a Safari bug)
A cross-browser bookmarklet to examine the box-model of any DOM element on a page. Runs on Internet Explorer, Safari (and Webkit based browsers), Mozilla (including Firefox and Camino).
A DHTML shell that allows you to query the current browser window. Includes command line JavaScript execution, mouseover DOM query, CSS input, tab completion, profiler and object inspection. Can be configured to run off a bookmarklet, and works in IE, Firefox, Safari and Opera
Using console.log outside of Firefox? Here's Joe Hewitt's simple JavaScript file to allow console.log to work on Internet Explorer, Opera and Safari. Reference the script in the page you want to debug, and add a class of debug into the HTML element, and you have a JavaScript console. There's also a command line - just like the real Firebug.