Darkness reigns over Wikipedia as official dark mode comes to pass
Let the way-too-late nights researching each Beach Boys album in order commence.
Let the way-too-late nights researching each Beach Boys album in order commence.
HTML5 is making huge strides toward the semantic web — and the semantic standards defined by the Google/Bing/Yahoo-backed schema.org are probably prudent standards to follow. But if we’re talking prudence, practicality, and semantics, then we’re proba…
If you’re developing for iOS, you’re probably particularly interested in how iOS handles HTML5. Even if you love Flash, you might want to think about redirecting some of that affection, given today’s news from Adobe.
You can use a language, and not care how it works; or you can use a language, learn how and why it works, and then go on to improve it yourself. You can, of course, improve a language without knowing how it works — just providing feedback is often ple…
Last week I wrote a brief introduction to Kristof Degrave’s ongoing, multi-stage IndexedDB tutorial. Judging by the number of reads, it looks like quite a few of you are interested in learning more about HTML5’s IndexedDB. I’m following Kristof’s tutor…
Well, after hubbub, including some here at DZone, the HTML5 <time> element has returned. Paul Cotton, on behalf of the chairs of the working group, issued a revert request — and his explanation is interesting:
So affirms Sencha, in the latest installment of their HTML5 developer scorecards series. Four-sentence version:
Who doesn’t want their apps to integrate with Facebook? the second most popular site worldwide, and most popular, bar none, in eight countries (according to Alexa)? Well, Facebook loves PHP, and even offers a PHP SDK for the Facebook API.
Suffering a little whiplash after the rapid-fire removal and return of HTML5’s <time> element, I became curious about how the working groups at W3C actually, well, work. In particular, I noticed something about the wording of Steve Faulkner’…
For all its plausible physics, Angry Birds is more stress-relief than puzzle — less a gravitational/collision brain-teaser, and more a cortisol drain. Wonderful things, these 2D cortisol drains, but not as mentally satisfying as something like Cut the…
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