View allAll Photos Tagged html5,
Our badges spelling out buzzwords. Hoping that folk will grab a few or rearrange it to something interesting
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17TH APRIL, LONDON - Chris Buckett & The London HTML5 User Group meet to find out how Dart, and it's Web UI framework for creating Model Driven Views and Web Components with the Shadow DOM, can be used to create applications that run in all modern browsers. See the SkillsCast (Video, code, slides) at: bit.ly/1005o2q
Screenshots of HTML5 drawing app for Microsoft's Art of Touch campaign. It runs surprisingly smoothly even when rendering heavy geometry.
Photograph from Mobile Developer Summit 2012 held in Bangalore, India, 9-10 October 2012, produced by Saltmarch Media. Photograph ©Copyright Saltmarch Media. Non-commercial use permitted with attribution and linkback to this page on Saltmarch's Flickr photostream. All other rights reserved.
17TH APRIL, LONDON - Chris Buckett & The London HTML5 User Group meet to find out how Dart, and it's Web UI framework for creating Model Driven Views and Web Components with the Shadow DOM, can be used to create applications that run in all modern browsers. See the SkillsCast (Video, code, slides) at: bit.ly/1005o2q
Mehr Infos auch auf www.w3.org/html/logo/
Während der MSDN on Tour Sommer-Edition im Juni 2011 werden wir auch das Thema HTML5 behandeln: www.MSDN-on-Tour.de
Some fun with persistence of vision / lightpainting using HTML5 canvas on an iPhone.
Try it yourself – one advice: set the luminosity of the screen to the brightest level possible.
Here I am with my trusty assistant.
I built the slightly controversial HTML 5 logo out of LEGO bricks. Hey, who was I to know that the W3C and the WHATWG were going to have their little tiff. Oh, wait, never mind. Anyhow, I started building shortly after the W3C announced the Logo, and finished building shortly after the WHATWG declared that it wasn't going to be called HTML 5 anymore. At least I got to play with LEGO bricks in the meantime, so it wasn't all for nothing. :)
I built the slightly controversial HTML 5 logo out of LEGO bricks. Hey, who was I to know that the W3C and the WHATWG were going to have their little tiff. Oh, wait, never mind. Anyhow, I started building shortly after the W3C announced the Logo, and finished building shortly after the WHATWG declared that it wasn't going to be called HTML 5 anymore. At least I got to play with LEGO bricks in the meantime, so it wasn't all for nothing. :)
Read a little more at Duckingham Design.