Tagged with “html5” (22) activity chart

  1. The Web Ahead #21: Process & Tools with Paul Irish

    Front-end developer extraordinaire Paul Irish joins Jen Simmons to discuss work process, tools and best-practices.

    http://5by5.tv/webahead/21

    —Huffduffed by adactio 9 months ago

  2. Remy Sharp Still Building Web Pages with HTML 5

    While at NDC, Carl and Richard talk to Remy Sharp about HTML 5. Remy discusses the state of things, how the diversity of browsers is as much a strength as a problem. He digs into the idea that you need to build your web app for the audience you have - perhaps it needs more support for older browsers, or focus on the latest features for the newest browsers. Check out the great collection of links to different services and sites that Remy mentions in the discussion!

    Remy Sharp is the founder and curator of Full Frontal, the UK based JavaScript conference. He also runs jQuery for Designers, co-authored Introducing HTML5 (adding all the JavaScripty bits) and is one of the curators of HTML5Doctor.com.

    Whilst he’s not writing articles or running and speaking at conferences, he runs his own development and training company in Brighton called Left Logic. Generally speaking, he’s about as crazy about JavaScript, HTML & CSS as a squirrel is about his nuts during the winter!

    http://www.dotnetrocks.com/default.aspx?showNum=781

    —Huffduffed by adactio 10 months ago

  3. Excessive Enhancement: JavaScript’s Dark Side

    Are we being seduced by the animation and rich UI capabilities of modern browsers at the expense of the underlying platform of the Web?

    The Web has entered a new phase in its evolution: The proliferation of a JavaScript enabled audience with increased processing grunt in their devices, better and more ambitious JavaScript developers, and users with an appetite for sophisticated experiences, all seem to be helping to move the web in a rich and exciting direction.

    Good developers understand about graceful degradation, progressive enhancement, unobtrusive JavaScript and the like, so why are we seeing big companies building web offerings with little apparent thought for their impact on the Web?

    We’ll explore this by looking at what the Web was, is now, and might become. We’ll look at examples of exciting user interfaces and sophisticated interactions. We’ll also examine some emerging techniques for providing rich user interactions without hurting the web or killing kittens.

    Phil Hawksworth, Technical Director, R/GA

    Phil began his career building web applications for financial institutions such as Commerzbank, Deutsche Bank, and the London Stock Exchange in the late nineties. A focus on web architectures and real-time data delivery lead Phil to a variety of web development roles with particular attention to emerging front-end development techniques and JavaScript application development.

    After several years working on web applications and consulting on web best practices at technology companies such as Verisign, VMware and BT, Phil made the move into the agency world where he managed development teams and architected solutions on projects for clients including of eBay, Sony and BP.

    Phil Hawksworth is a Technical Director at R/GA and enjoys talking about himself in the third person.

    —Huffduffed by adactio one year ago

  4. HTML5 APIs Will Change the Web: And Your Designs

    HTML5. It’s more than paving the cowpaths. It’s more than markup. There’s a lot of stuff in the spec about databases and communication protocols and blahdiblah backend juju. Some of that stuff is pretty radical. And it will change how you design websites. Why? Because for the last twenty years, web designers have been creating inside of a certain set of constraints. We’ve been limited in what’s possible by the technology that runs the web. We became so used to those limits, we stopped thinking about them. They became invisible. They Just Are. Of course the web works this certain way. Of course a user clicks and waits, the page loads, like this… but guess what? That’s not what the web will look like in the future. The constrains have changed. Come hear a non-nerd explanation of the new possibilities created by HTML5’s APIs. Don’t just wait around to see how other people implement these technologies. Learn about HTML APIs yourself, so you can design for and create the web of the future.

    http://schedule.sxsw.com/2012/events/event_IAP11512

    —Huffduffed by adactio one year ago

  5. SitePoint Podcast #143: Happy HTML5 Holidays with Bruce Lawson

    This week our regular interview host Louis Simoneau (@rssaddict) interviews Bruce Lawson who is a member of the Web Standards Project’s Accessibility Task Force, works at the Opera team and contributes to HTML5 Doctor.

    http://www.sitepoint.com/podcast-143-happy-html5-holidays-with-bruce-lawson/

    —Huffduffed by adactio one year ago

  6. Revision 45: H.264 in JS, jQuery Standards Team & OccupyHTML5! | Working Draft

    Frostig war es draußen, und Vollmond womöglich auch, als sich Schepp mit Marc Hinse, aka @MadeMyDay, und Hans Reinl, aka @drublic und Frontendentwickler aus Freiburg, ans virtuelle Kaminfeuer setzte und mit ihnen zusammen die Woche revuepassieren ließ.

    http://workingdraft.de/45/

    —Huffduffed by adactio one year ago

  7. HTML5: What It Is What It Isn’t And Where It Might Go

    A talk at Sabre in Krakow, Poland about HTML5 myths, truths and what is around the corner for new web technology.

    http://www.archive.org/details/Html5101-WhatItIsWhatItIsntAndWhereItMightGo

    —Huffduffed by adactio one year ago

  8. Xcommerce 2011 – The web and browsers as the platform – exciting opportunities in new web technology

    A presentation from Christian Heilmann on how new technology can make ecommerce more engaging.

    http://www.wait-till-i.com/2011/10/13/xcommerce/

    —Huffduffed by adactio one year ago

  9. 5by5 | The Web Ahead #3: Jeremy Keith on Everything Web

    Jeremy Keith joins Jen to talk about Mobilewood, future-friendlying websites, responsive design techniques, digital preservation, html5 semantics, Firefox 7, and much more.

    http://5by5.tv/webahead/3

    A weekly podcast about changing technologies and the future of the web, discussing HTML5, mobile, responsive design, iOS, Android, and more. Hosted by Jen Simmons.

    —Huffduffed by adactio one year ago

  10. Michael Mahemoff — HTML5 offline for fun and performance

    With HTML5, we can now cache our applications and the data that goes with them. This means our favourite programming platform can now be used to build apps that work offline, survive intermittent downtimes, and gain in performance from cached content. In this session we’ll get hands-​​​​on with the application cache to make the app run when it’s not online. We’ll check out the techniques for client-​​​​side persistence: web storage and indexed database. Finally, we’ll look at the latest techniques for file access — reading and writing files on the user’s hard drive from a web app is being defined by web standards and implemented in today’s modern browsers.

    Michael Mahemoff is a Chrome Developer Advocate for Google, based in London, always looking at ways to make the web a more habitable place for users and developers alike. He’s been programming on the web since the mid ’90s, in a range of public-​​​​facing and enterprise (Java, what else?) contexts, and is the author of Ajax Design Patterns (O’Reilly, 2006) and a blogger for Ajaxian​.com. Server side, he’s mostly a Ruby, PHP, and NodeJS guy and sushi is his preferred coding fuel. Michael holds a PhD from the University of Melbourne, covering software design patterns for improving user experience.

    http://www.webdirections.org/resources/michael-mahemoff-html5-offline-for-fun-and-performance/

    —Huffduffed by adactio one year ago

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