Typically the contents of /public are directly served by the web server (nginx, apache etc.) without intervention from rails, so traditionally all of your static assets (images, stylesheets, javascripts etc.) went in here. You can still put your javascript in there but it's a bit old fashioned.
Rails 3.1 introduced the asset pipeline which changed all of this. Assets in app/assets, lib/assets and vendor/assets all get servers up by the asset pipeline. Normally your application specific assets would go in app/assets and 3rd party libraries (such as a query plugin) would go in vendor/assets. If you were developing your own set of jquery plugins you might put them in lib/assets. Assets will 'work' no matter where you put them though - it's just a question of organisation.
Gems can also have their own asset folders, for example the jquery-rails gem bundles jquery and allows your app to serve up jquery without actually copying it into your app. I find this even neater than putting things in vendor/assets.