HTML5 Please - Use the new and shiny responsibly
january 2012 by keithly
Look up HTML5, CSS3, etc features, know if they are ready for use, and if so find out how you should use them – with polyfills, fallbacks or as they are.
html5
reference
css
html
css3
january 2012 by keithly
If HTML5 Kills the Blog Format, I Won't Shed a Tear
january 2012 by keithly
The blog format relieves publishers from the tiresome duty of producing covers and front pages and things to make their content more attractive and attract readers. In some cases, it enables publishers to surrender any responsibility for making content attractive in the first place.
There is a prophetic scene in the magnificent movie "Wall-E" where, after having floated in space for centuries in a self-contained shopping mall, the remains of the human race return to Earth. There, upon realizing that food once grew on trees and that trees must be cared for, the people ponder for the first time in their lives just how the pizza and ice cream sprouted forth from these stem-like thingies.
blogging
html5
cms
There is a prophetic scene in the magnificent movie "Wall-E" where, after having floated in space for centuries in a self-contained shopping mall, the remains of the human race return to Earth. There, upon realizing that food once grew on trees and that trees must be cared for, the people ponder for the first time in their lives just how the pizza and ice cream sprouted forth from these stem-like thingies.
january 2012 by keithly
HTML5 Reset
september 2010 by keithly
Like a lot of developers, we start every HTML project with the same set of HTML and CSS templates. We've been using these files for a long time and we've progressively added bits and pieces to them as our own personal best practices have evolved.
Now that modern browsers are starting to support some of the really useful parts of HTML5 and CSS3, it's time for an update, and we thought we'd put it out there for everyone to use. By no means do we see this as the end-all and beat-all, but we think it's a fairly good starting place that anyone can take and make their own.
html5
css
html
webdesign
Now that modern browsers are starting to support some of the really useful parts of HTML5 and CSS3, it's time for an update, and we thought we'd put it out there for everyone to use. By no means do we see this as the end-all and beat-all, but we think it's a fairly good starting place that anyone can take and make their own.
september 2010 by keithly
When can I use...
december 2009 by keithly
Compatibility tables for features in HTML5, CSS3, SVG and other upcoming web technologies
css
webdesign
reference
html5
december 2009 by keithly
hacks.mozilla.org
june 2009 by keithly
This site is here to highlight leading edge stuff that people are doing with Mozilla Firefox and the open web. The web is accelerating with the rise of modern browsers and Firefox is leading the pack - both in terms of adoption by end users and the technology itself. Adoption of technology landing in browsers usually takes a couple of years as ideas and interfaces spread from browser to browser and then is picked up by developers. Exploring what’s possible helps drive adoption and interest both on the parts of developers and browser builders. This site is here to help show what’s possible at the edges of web technology.
firefox
html5
javascript
css
webdesign
june 2009 by keithly
mezzoblue § Switched
april 2009 by keithly
Within the last few months — though I’d been intending to do so for much longer than that — I made the decision to switch all my client work starting point templates from XHTML over to HTML 4.01 and start delivering everything as plain old semantic HTML, minus the X.
webdesign
html5
april 2009 by keithly
Preparing for HTML5 with Semantic Class Names — Jon Tan 陳
april 2009 by keithly
This is a brief introduction to the new structural elements in the HTML 5 Working Draft, and how to use semantic class names in HTML 4.01 or XHTML 1.0 markup that correspond to the names of those structural elements. By doing so, you’ll get a head start in understanding how to use the new elements and also go some way towards using plain old semantic HTML if you’re not already.
semantics
webdesign
html5
april 2009 by keithly
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