Tag HTML5

Cool Browser: Opera 11.60 beta

Back in the days of the peak of the browser wars when high flying Netscape fought incursions from Internet Explorer I sought refuge and took up Opera as an alternative to avoid the fallout.

Recently, I was quite pleasantly surprised to learn that Opera which always was a great browser managed to survive those intense browser wars seemingly without major success and now in the era of massive social media they are “hanging in there”

Maybe their time has finally come having just releasedOpera 11.60 beta  their latest version now available for download.

Opera 11.60 beta includes:

  • Support for HTML5 microdata support
  • ECMAScript 5.1
  • Additional HTML5 support.
  • HTML5-compliant parser
  • Rich functionality for serious web developers
  • Improved compatibility with other browsers.
  • Redesigned address field with new search suggestions
  • Improved results display in History and Bookmarks.
  • Allows adding pages to bookmarks or Speed Dial instantly,
  • Passwords sync allows access to passwords from any computer,
  • Opera Link synchronises bookmarks and browser information.

If there is a company that keeps plugging on it is Opera and they really deserve our support and for you to take a good look at their product and give it a try. I just did and as always with Opera it is fast and feature packed.

If you are wary of Beta versions go pick up the latest stable version.

Download Opera 11.60 beta from their website .

HTML5 and CSS3 on the Rise

It is believed that Steve Jobs and Apple are to blame for the destruction and de-throning of Adobe’s once high-flying Flash. That may be or is overstatment, but the fact remains that Flash is no longer the future of web development nor state-of-the-art.

It seems to have started around the timing of the debut of the iPad and was quickly extended with the lack of Flash on Apple’s popular iPhones.

In the ensuing vacuum HTML5 and CSS3 have stepped forward to assume the mantle of de-facto standards chosen by web developers. Flash flew high its day but was unable to weather and sustain through the ebb and flow of rapid changing innovation and demands of development.

In this shift the web world of the toolset of the average developer changed enormously and HTML5 and CSS3 were both in ascendancy and Flash was is in decline. There are many reasons for this change but without getting into that debate or discussion just surface it to say that the smart developer must seriously consider studying and mastering HTML5 and CSS3 if they desire to work in the industry or start a new web-centric business of any kind.

There are a vast number of online and offline resources out there to obtain training. ebook courses and tutorials are coming out by the dozens to feed the need. Universities, training centers and junior colleges have formally incorporated them into their curriculum.

If you are a new developer this is a uniquely perfect time to dive right in. You do not have to unlearn dense outdated techniques or forget or work around now obsolete methods or technologies.

Adobe Muse (Beta)

 

If you are in the web creation business it might benefit you to know that Adobe has released the public beta of its new website creation software, code-named Muse, on Monday. This is not Adobe first foray into the market. They are the power behind Dreamweaver, Image Ready and a whole roster of development tools however Muse is for graphic designers who want to create elegant websites without having to code.

Some who have been testing Muse are enjoying the tool’s functionality and featureset. What makes Muse stand out is the user interface and the design approach is similar to other Adobe Creative Suite applications, namely InDesign.

Graphic designers have spent years learning Photoshop and InDesign and work in print. It will work like this A graphic designer will create a website in Illustrator, Fireworks or Photoshop and then pass the flattened file off to web designers who will then do their best to code it. Now With Muse, Adobe hopes to eliminate that coding step for users whose sites don’t need lots of dynamic content — and who want to lay out and generate the code for their site with one tool.

The chief advantage is the small application footprint and lots of familiar features and functions.

Another great feature is that Museis an Adobe Air application, rather than a full-blown native app. Meaning it works on Mac and PC.

Muse was built to take advantage of certain HTML5 and CSS3 properties and to generate semantically-correct code.

One can add your own HTML snippets or dynamic content information to a Muse page, and the app also comes with a set of pre-defined widgets. These widgets are written in jQuery and can be modified like any other element. CSS3 transitions are also possible to create in Muse; the process is seamless.

One can also preview a page locally using the built-in WebKit browser or by opening up a file in the default app on your Mac or PC. This is great for seeing exactly how something looks in a browser before publishing.

Muse might best be used to prototype content that would then be implemented into other systems like WordPress. For instance, a page and section layout designed in Muse could become a new WordPress theme.

Pricing & Availability

Muse is available in public beta now, and Adobe has said the program will be free until its official release in early 2012.

Once Muse launches under its final name in early 2012, it will be available by subscription. This is the first Adobe product to have a subscription-only pricing scheme and it will be $15 per month with a one-year commitment or $20 per month on a month-to-month basis.

Users who want to publish their sites can choose to use Adobe Business Catalyst for their hosting needs and publish directly from Muse. If you have hosting setup elsewhere, you can export the contents of your site as HTML and upload the corresponding files, images, HTML and CSS files to your web server.

It might seem to some that instead of improving its core of existing solutions Adobe has chosen to borrow the best features from all of their mostly print centric applications and create a new reason for their loyal base of graphic users to buy into, learn and subscribe to. It might also breathe life into their recently flagging Creative Suite which has grown long in the tooth. It also works around the exodus from Flash by handily embrasing HTML5 and CSS3. Nothing wrong with that!

…So this is what has kept Adobe busy lately.

Super Editor: BBEdit

If you are a serious Mac user and have done any level of coding or web development you have probably used, are addicted to, considered using or at the very least have looked at using BBEdit. by Bare Bones Software.

This powerrful and versatile editor’s tool has been a rock solid staple in many code developer’s arsenal for many years and unlike other more lightweight or limited options has managed to maintain and improve steadily over the years and through web innovation anf huge web development changes.

In all the hustle and bustle of movement towards bite-sized apps and specific tools BBEdit has received very little attention and actually seems to be a best-kept insider secret among knowledgable Mac users.

If you have done your research and homework and are considering doing any level of advanced web coding you really owe it to yourself to take a good hard long look at BBEdit. (A hint: For once. read the manual!)

Banking on: Java, AIR & Flash

java_vs_flash

java_vs_flash

 

For a few years talented programmers have wondered whether to learn and use Flash or Java or some other such development toolset. On sheer faith programmers bought into the power and promise Adobe or SUN Tools over the last couple of years. Then Life happened brining a variety of options!

Many pioneering developers and programmers are still wondering exactly what happened? Well, as usual the world kept turning and sure enough things changed as they have a way of doing. One could easily have envisioned how solutions built on Flash and Java would, could, and in some cases have actually become central to the emerging Social Media Ecosystem. However as it has ultimately turned out platform politics took over and things changed rapidly. The effects are just now being felt and realized. Flash and Java have quickly fallen out of favor and their developer base is left wondering, “where to from here?”
Adobe is in a similar position as Microsoft and will have to pioneer and chart new paths for their base of  loyal and dedicated developers and believers that will have to tow the company line. In the meantime, HTML 5 is capturing the excitement of creative developers around the world and the web.
These are of course substantial  risks and requirements of investing in, learning and committing to new emerging and sometimes unproven technology.  The jury is not in yet on this, but the other shoe seems to be dropping and daily we are seeing changes that  echo down to impact decisions we made long ago.

Much the same can also be said of Python, C++, Ruby but these have been the fuel behind the tools we now use and have come rely on. The lesson here is that even though the tools may certainly change our needs for them and the ways we will use them will remain strong and grow as we go forward. The game is still young.

Years after initial success, Java, Flash and Microsoft’s Dynamic HTML (reborn as AJAX) are not faring well, and SUN has washed their hands of JAVA, now the baby of Oracle and HTML5 is lurking ready to step up and snatch up the future.

Microsoft has decided to stradle the fence by delivering additional HTML5 and Java tools this year for their many Visual Studio programmers.

This all must be extremely confusing for young fledgling would-be programmers trying to figure out just what to study and master.

Where all this will end up, only time will tell!

W3C: HTML5 Draft, Last Call

HTML5

HTML5

A piece of very important info for web developers almost got right past me.

After 3 years of development the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) HTML Working Group has elected to move the much anticipated HTML5 draft specification to what they term as “Last Call status”. This means HTML5 is about to become the big noise in the band.

Even though the the HTML5 spec may just now be emerging, savvy Web developers have been using preliminary HTML5 tools for a long time now. And infrastructure, application and equipment manufacturers  have been preparing for the change. HTML5 is already in wide use throughout the web. It is showing up innately embedded video and highly experimental movie projects proving that draft status did not stop developers from moving forward in embracing HTML5.

It’ll will still be several years before HTML5 reaches the official Recommendation status. Last Call is the first of a series of important steps. including 10 more weeks of bug reports. At that time the W3C’s HTML Working Group will have until January 2012 to fix those bugs. Once that’s done, barring any substantive changes, HTML5 will move the designation of Candidate Recommendation, then, eventually to official W3C Recommendation.

HTML5 is supposed to maintain backwards compatibility with early versions of HTML

A few believe that until a few outstanding issues are resolved, the HTML5 Working Group should hold off on the move to Last Call. here is also a battle goin on between the backers of Flash and HTML5 folks.

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