1. Zooming and rotating for video in HTML5 and CSS3

    The source of the code examples in this post is available on GitHub and you can see the demo in action. There are dozens of video players that allow you to do all the normal things with videos: play, pause, jump to a certain time Read more…

  2. Talking about HTML5 games development at MIT in Boston

    As part of our university outreach programme, a few Mozilla people and volunteers went to Boston last week to give a series of lectures on web technologies for games development. During the week we covered topics like WebGL for 3D development, basics of JavaScript, debugging Read more…

  3. People of HTML5 – Remy Sharp

    HTML5 needs spokespeople to work. There are a lot of people out there who took on this role, and here at Mozilla we thought it is a good idea to introduce some of them to you with a series of interviews and short videos. The Read more…

  4. Spirit of Indiana (Jones) – syncing HTML5 Video with Maps

  5. HTML5 Video preload attribute supported in Firefox 4, autobuffer attribute removed

    This is a re-post from Chris Pearce’s blog. To comply with the HTML5 specification, we replaced the autobuffer attribute with the tri-state preload attribute. We encourage you to update your code. See the documention on MDC. Late last week I landed support on Firefox trunk Read more…

  6. HTML5 video ‘buffered’ property available in Firefox 4

    Support for the HTML5 video 'buffered' property has landed in Firefox, we can now accurately determine which time-segments of a video we can play and seek into without needing to pause playback to download more data. Read more…

  7. Fun With Fast JavaScript

  8. Firefox, YouTube and WebM

    Five important items of note today relating to Mozilla’s support for the VP8 codec: 1. Google will be releasing VP8 under an open source and royalty-free basis. VP8 is a high-quality video codec that Google acquired when they purchased the company On2. The VP8 codec Read more…

  9. Beyond HTML5: experiments with interactive audio

  10. Theora on N900

    This is a re-post from Matthew Gregan’s personal weblog on the work that he’s been doing to bring HTML5 open video to mobile devices. Google recently announced funding for some work to bring Theora to ARM devices via a CPU-driven code path. Mozilla has been Read more…