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Welcome HTML5

Monday, February 7th 2011. | Science, Technology, The Internet, Your Gadget

“No question, the world goes HTML5,” says Microsoft’s Steve Ballmer at Gartner Symposium. Google’s Eric Schmidt called it “the next step in browsers,” while Apple’s Steve Jobs bluntly claimed that it “will win”. Let’s we find the answer about this.

HTML 4 is the most successful and widely used markup format, but most web developers find problems creating interactive content because of the HTML 4 limitation. So to give more flexibility an interoperability more interactive and exciting websites and applications, HTML 5 was born. It is targeted at areas that have not been adequately dealt with by his predecessors. For example, you can use an API to track support for various video formats, play a video, pause, mute audio track how much of the video has been downloaded, and everything else you need to enrich the user experience. It’s still getting better and more and more HTML 5 content coming out of the shell.

W3C has opened its doors for HTML 5, and it seems that there is no escape from the fact that HTML 5 will rock our world. All the major browsers have recently begun to support these new features. HTML 5 is not a single large company and it is rather a set of individual features that may or may not be supported in your browser choice. There are no global support for HTML 5, but you can find the individual features such as video, or geographical location in Major browsers. HTML 5-specification are getting close to stable, so it is now possible to use bits of this new standard in the code. How much you spend depends on your politics and interests, or maybe it’s simply too impractical for many businesses. I’ve already started my move to the new technology just because I think HTML 5 is only here to stay.

Web Wars

HTML 5 technologies can ultimately make a big impact on the world of computers and the new browser technologies can reduce the need for Adobe plug-ins. Flash has proved useful when it comes to delivering video and interactive content on the Internet, and despite its performance problems, people continue to use it. It has long dominated the market and is the most popular way for developers to create animations, video and complex interactive features geared to more traditional platforms such as desktop and laptop computers. According to Adobe, 98 percent or more of Internet-connected desktops have Flash installed. But the core of Flash technology, which is its dominance in rendering web-based graphics and animation are a serious threat. Right now, in the form of powerful tool set, the flash is still running strong. But it has a strong suitor!

HTML based content is popping out from everywhere. Ben Galbraith, who works on Palm’s WebOS, using HTML 5′s canvas to create a rich web-based code-editing program. Google has also shown us the power of HTML 5, and if you visit Body browser on Google Labs are using a supported web browser, you will get a three-dimensional layered model of the human body, where you can zoom, rotate, and searching. It is currently not supported by mainstream browsers, but Firefox 4 beta can support it. Another area where Flash’s dominance seemed unreachable was browser-based games. As a showcase for HTML5′s power, a new game called “Pirates Love Daisies” was released. Zynga’s release of Atlantic City is also available on nearly all smartphones on the market that have chosen a browser-based HTML 5 platform.â â € “with a massive increase in the number of smart phone and tablet users and steady changes in computer trends, landscape change and Flash suffering a severe stroke. Steve Jobs has kept his promise and kept the doors closed IOS to Flash and it can take a very long time for even Flash-friendly devices such as Android phones come to market with full support for Flash. Even when they do, the experience is so unpleasant that you can make sure the only problem with Flash is not Steve Jobs’ cockiness! with devices like the Samsung Galaxy Tab, the entire experience is just a train wreck and the user will find themselves disabling Flash all together. On Google, Cr-48 Netbooks, which shows the new Chrome OS also a bit sluggish Flash performance and choppy playback of YouTube and Hulu video. Adobe promised hope is on the way! Like the time before and the time before that!

Flash’s days of dominance may be numbered considering Apple’s hostility and the rise of a new open Web standard that seeks to make interactivity an integral part of all web browsers. While Flash introduces extra capacity to browsers when it is downloaded and installed, HTML 5 would ensure that similar functionality is included in browsers, which adopted it as a standard by default, and it would not be controlled by a single company. The specification is still under development and HTML5 sounds and looks fantastic, but there is still a long way to go! it’s just to be a while before it is fully integrated into still life. As mobile Internet browsing continues to grow, the HTML 5 takes the first steps very strong.

Cat : Science, Technology, The Internet, Your Gadget,

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