Mozilla Hacks Weekly, December 1st 2011

December has just started, and what better way to start it than sharing some reading tips with you?

Weekly links December 1st 2011

If there is anything you think we should read or know about, don’t hesitate to post a comment, contact us on Twitter or through any other mean.
The picks this week are:

Christian Heilmann

A picture of Christian Heilmann Jacob Seidelin put quite a lot of 3D Particle effects in JavaScript together.

If you want to read more tips or discuss the web with Christian, he’s available on Twitter as @codepo8.

Havi Hoffman

A picture of Havi Hoffman Implementing Mouse Lock – a series of posts by Mozillian David Humphrey about collaboratively implementing the new Mouse Lock API for Mozilla, as part of an Open Source CS course he’s teaching.

Havi can be found on Twitter as @freshelectrons

Jean-Yves Perrier

A picture of Jean-Yves Perrier Addy Osmani gives an interesting overview of the different opportunities, technical or non-technical, offered to help building the web of tomorrow in The Smashing Guide to Moving the Web Forward.

If you want to read more tips or discuss the web with Jean-Yves, he’s available on Twitter as @teoli2003.

Rob Hawkes

A picture of Rob Hawkes Fun with <video> and <canvas> is a cool little demo from Paul Rouget that changes the colour of the background using canvas based on what is currently showing on a HTML5 video.

If you want to read more tips or discuss the web with Rob, he’s available on Twitter as @robhawkes.

Robert Nyman

A picture of Robert Nyman The Relationship Between Firebug and Mozilla Developer Tools – If you have wondered about the relation between those two.

If you want to read more tips or discuss the web with Robert, he’s available on Twitter as @robertnyman.

About Robert Nyman [Editor emeritus]

Technical Evangelist & Editor of Mozilla Hacks. Gives talks & blogs about HTML5, JavaScript & the Open Web. Robert is a strong believer in HTML5 and the Open Web and has been working since 1999 with Front End development for the web - in Sweden and in New York City. He regularly also blogs at http://robertnyman.com and loves to travel and meet people.

More articles by Robert Nyman [Editor emeritus]…