What’s New in Safari 6
New docs are up at the Apple Developer site. Some of the most notable new features include the Web Audio API, CSS Filters (hooray!), and HTML5 Web Notifications.
A tumblog about the browser engine built into Safari, Chrome, iOS, Android, and BlackBerry. Authored by the fanboys below, who have nothing to do with the official WebKit project.
New docs are up at the Apple Developer site. Some of the most notable new features include the Web Audio API, CSS Filters (hooray!), and HTML5 Web Notifications.
Google I/O 2012 - The Web Can Do That!? Great presention by Eric Bidelman, covering some of my favorite new features in CSS3, some super-interesting bits of HTML5 like <datalist> and the download attribute, and some amazing A/V demos at the end (getUserMedia FTW). A fantastic preview of the next stage of web applications.
(Source: youtube.com)
Here’s what we know about Mobile Safari in iOS 6 so far, and what it brings to the table for front end developers. I expect there’s more to come in future betas and as people experiment with the current beta more.
Great roundup of some serious improvements to Mobile Safari. I’m not breaking NDA if I just link to this stuff, right? RIGHT?!
I would hate to think that we could be paving the way for countless errors just because img set is easier to implement in browsers. Implementation on the browser side takes place once; authoring will take place thousands of times.Mat Marquis in a special edition of A List Apart, discussing the two options emerging for responsive images and the recent collision between the WHATWG and the Responsive Images Community Group.
Tim Kadlec does a great job at breaking down the process which has led to the recent community disappointment in the WHATWG over the srcset attribute.
What message does it send when developers try to contribute their time, energy and effort to help solve a problem only to have it so casually dismissed?
If you’ve ever tried to get precise em-based values of
letter-spacingto work in a WebKit browser, you’ve probably wondered why that isn’t really possible, while Firefox or Internet Explorer 10 for example do allow fine-grained control.
Chromium has added experimental support for the Web Intents API to Chrome stable.
(Source: youtube.com)