This document discusses HTML5 and its features. It explains that HTML5 aims to provide clear and semantic markup. It highlights new HTML5 elements like <header>, <section>, <article>, and <footer> that divide a document into clearly defined parts. It also discusses new multimedia capabilities in HTML5 such as <audio> and <canvas> elements, forms, local storage, geolocation, and databases. The document advocates that HTML5 is beautiful, practical, and free to use. It provides examples and links to further resources on HTML5 features.
The document discusses HTML5 and its features. It describes how HTML5 introduces new semantic elements that are clearer and more semantic than traditional HTML tags, and shows an example HTML5 document structure. It also discusses some of HTML5's new features like audio, video, canvas, forms, and APIs for local storage, geolocation and web SQL databases. Finally, it provides examples of using some of these new features in HTML5.
The document contains a repeated note labeled "KeyNote" along with repeated URLs and images. It also contains contact information for "sofish @ alipay" and the website "http://sofish.de". The document seems to be advertising or promoting these contacts and images but does not provide any additional context or explanation.
1. The document lists new features in HTML5 and CSS3 including drag and drop, local storage, geolocation, media queries, and cross-browser compatibility.
2. It compares features between desktop and mobile browsers such as iPad, and notes HTML5 can provide capabilities previously requiring plugins like drag and drop files and geolocation without Flash.
3. New HTML5 features like local storage, geolocation, and drag and drop are gaining popularity for building engaging web applications and improving the user experience on various platforms.
This document discusses HTML5 and its features. It explains that HTML5 aims to provide clear and semantic markup. It highlights new HTML5 elements like <header>, <section>, <article>, and <footer> that divide a document into clearly defined parts. It also discusses new multimedia capabilities in HTML5 such as <audio> and <canvas> elements, forms, local storage, geolocation, and databases. The document advocates that HTML5 is beautiful, practical, and free to use. It provides examples and links to further resources on HTML5 features.
The document discusses HTML5 and its features. It describes how HTML5 introduces new semantic elements that are clearer and more semantic than traditional HTML tags, and shows an example HTML5 document structure. It also discusses some of HTML5's new features like audio, video, canvas, forms, and APIs for local storage, geolocation and web SQL databases. Finally, it provides examples of using some of these new features in HTML5.
The document contains a repeated note labeled "KeyNote" along with repeated URLs and images. It also contains contact information for "sofish @ alipay" and the website "http://sofish.de". The document seems to be advertising or promoting these contacts and images but does not provide any additional context or explanation.
1. The document lists new features in HTML5 and CSS3 including drag and drop, local storage, geolocation, media queries, and cross-browser compatibility.
2. It compares features between desktop and mobile browsers such as iPad, and notes HTML5 can provide capabilities previously requiring plugins like drag and drop files and geolocation without Flash.
3. New HTML5 features like local storage, geolocation, and drag and drop are gaining popularity for building engaging web applications and improving the user experience on various platforms.
62. No one ever got fired for choosing
long-polling. One thing is known
for certain. Long polling always
works.
— Guillermo Rauch
http://www.devthought.com/2012/07/07/the-realtime-engine/
63. No one ever got fired for choosing
long-polling. One thing is known
for certain. Long polling always
works.
— Guillermo Rauch
http://www.devthought.com/2012/07/07/the-realtime-engine/