Articles for July 2009
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open video codecs discussion at Mozilla
On Tuesday, July 28th, 2009, Mozilla hosted a brownbag and lunch discussion with Davis Freeberg and Dan Miller on the subject of open video codecs. Dan Miller is one of the founders of On2 and is largely responsible for the free release of VP3, which is the basis for the Theora codec. Davis Freeberg hosts […]
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arun talks about html5, fonts and india
Recently Arun Ranganathan, one of the members of the Mozilla Evangelism team, created a video for MozCamp Mumbai. It’s about 20 minutes long and he covers a huge number of topics: the new @font-face CSS property and how it affects the ability for people to receive properly localized content, the differences between the various standards […]
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an overview of TraceMonkey
This post was written by David Mandelin who works on Mozilla’s JavaScript team. Firefox 3.5 has a new JavaScript engine, TraceMonkey, that runs many JavaScript programs 3-4x faster than Firefox 3, speeding up existing web apps and enabling new ones. This article gives a peek under the hood at the major parts of TraceMonkey and […]
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HTML5 drag and drop in Firefox 3.5
This post is from Les Orchard, who works on Mozilla’s web development team. Introduction Drag and drop is one of the most fundamental interactions afforded by graphical user interfaces. In one gesture, it allows users to pair the selection of an object with the execution of an action, often including a second object in the […]
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elliptical borders in Firefox 3.5
Today’s demo comes from Lim Chee Aun, the creator of the Phoenity icons and themes, and web developer in Malaysia. The border-radius property is probably one of the most interesting parts of the CSS3 specification, where it allows you to create rounded corners on elements. For example: div { border-radius: 10px; -moz-border-radius: 10px; -webkit-border-radius: 10px; […]
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css3 columns on the web
Today’s Demo covers the use of CSS3 Columns and was written by Karl Dubost. Karl is a self-proclaimed hedonist, dreamer and always exploring the Open Web for creative spaces. Read About CSS3 Columns and View the Demo in Firefox 3.5
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css transforms: styling the web in two dimensions
One feature that Firefox 3.5 adds to its CSS implementation is transform functions. These let you manipulate elements in two dimensional space by rotating, skewing, scaling, and translating them to alter their appearance. I’ve put together a demo that shows how some of these functions work. There are four animating objects in this demo. Let’s […]
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using web workers: working smarter, not harder
This article is written by Malte Ubl, who has done a lot of great work with using Web Workers as part of the bespin project. In recent years, the user experience of web applications has grown richer and richer. In-browser applications like GMail, Meebo and Bespin give us an impression of how the web will […]
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video – more than just a tag
This article is written by Paul Rouget, Mozilla contributor and purveyor of extraordinary Open Web demos. Starting with Firefox 3.5, you can embed a video in a web page like an image. This means video is now a part of the document, and finally, a first class citizen of the Open Web. Like all other […]
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slick tables with css 3 selectors
This article and demo come to us courtesy of Ivan Enderlin, author of the HOA Framework and longtime web developer. This is the article that accompanies the demo below, showing the use of CSS3 selectors implemented in Firefox 3.5 for easy and stylish tables. See this demo step by step. Basic HTML Table First, we […]