Multi-Safari
Although Safari does not have the market fragmentation of IE, it can be useful to have older versions around for testing Ext JS. Plus, I’m just kinda sentimental like that.
Although Safari does not have the market fragmentation of IE, it can be useful to have older versions around for testing Ext JS. Plus, I’m just kinda sentimental like that.
“Everyone is pretty much moving to WebKit… that makes our life a lot easier.”Sandeep Gupta, the man responsible for Yahoo!’s mobile app development
A fantastic overview from Rich Bradshaw, forkable on GitHub.
JoliCloud 1.0 premiers with a robust HTML5-based UI.
“As publishers strive for development efficiency, HTML5 enables easier cross-platform applications. Native development will continue to exist in the short-term, but the 80/20 rule applies, and unfortunately, if a handset maker isn’t one of those 80% platforms that is generating the revenue, developers are not going to write native applications for that platform.”VentureBeat, How can phone makers differentiate in a mobile 2.0 world?
My workmates at Sencha have created some excellent examples of CSS3 ads, based directly on current Flash ads. While they will only render in WebKit-based browsers, you can see they are actually more performant and smoother than their Flash counterparts.
YouTube’s mobile site gets a slick HTML5 overhaul for mobile WebKit.
2009–2010 David Kaneda