Christopher Schmitt

designer, web developer, author, strategist, dreamer

Working with the web since 1993, Christopher Schmitt directs Heatvision.com, Inc., a small new media publishing and design firm. The author of several books, including CSS Cookbook and Photoshop in 10 Simple Steps or Less, Schmitt is also a contributor to many web development magazines.

FROM THE ARCHIVE

Looking into HTML5

March 9

In talking with one of the Mikes at the Dayton Web Standards Meetup about what topics people would like to hear at an upcoming meeting, I shot off an email half-thinking, “well, I would like a talk on HTML5 and CSS3.”

I’m not exactly sure what his response was, but at the next meetup I was standing in front of about twenty people wanting to hear what I found out about HTML5.

That Mike sure is a sly one. Well, one of them, at least.

To be honest, I wasn’t too thrilled about the prospect of HTML5. I’m a little weary of anything still in the larval stage of Web development after getting bitten badly by the poor Netscape Navigator 4 betas.

But, as I dove into a little bit of HTML5 and what bleeding edge browsers that support the unfinsihed spec. Below are my slides from the presentation that can help other people who were as clueless as I was about HTML5.



View more presentations from teleject. (tags: xhtml webdesign)

See What Others Have Said

8 Responses to “Looking into HTML5”
  1. Eduardo Molteni Says:

    March 11th, 2009 at 3:26 pm

    What we really need is an HTMLTextArea control, that support entering WYSIWYG formatted HTML, help us combat XSS and Word formatting. In this new work of user generated content I think that this has to be top priority.

  2. rick Says:

    March 11th, 2009 at 3:42 pm

    no audio?

  3. Cameron Says:

    March 11th, 2009 at 7:28 pm

    Wow the usability of that embedded slide widget is awful.

    You should check out this great invention called HTML, it’s great for presenting information on the web, unlike static images. Maybe then the links would work reliably, and users could copy and paste text.

  4. Christopher Says:

    March 12th, 2009 at 12:23 am

    @Eduardo Molten That’s a good idea, but I think with a talented programmer you could overcome both those problems on the server-side and client-side.

    @rick I personally didn’t record any audio for the presentation. But I might do a recording on my own and add it in later.

    @Cameron I’ve updated the settings on the slides. You can now download a copy of the presentation.

  5. Al Macmillan Says:

    March 12th, 2009 at 4:09 am

    Hi Christopher,

    Loved the slides. Did anyone record you?

    AL

  6. Eduardo Molteni Says:

    March 12th, 2009 at 12:20 pm

    Well, I guess that *all* proposed changes for HTML5 could be overcome by talented programmers.

  7. Five Minute Argument Says:

    March 14th, 2009 at 8:59 pm

    @Eduardo Molteni: Great idea; couldn’t browser developers already do that with the plain old textarea? After all, the good ones have already enhanced it with spell-checking, that would just be a further (well, quite a *bit* further) step.

  8. craze Says:

    March 19th, 2009 at 9:55 pm

    SECTION, ARTICLE and ASIDE elements? Good heavens no! I agree on adding more semantics to the web, but please dont start with this, the web has too much variation for this. I agree with a lot with things like CANVAS and a whole lotta CSS3 stuff, but I really dont see anything useful in adding ARTICLE elements. Please get more focused on RDFa or something…

    (nothing against this post tho, this is just the first time I see an outline of HTML5)

Leave Your Comment

See me speak at In Control Orlando! ELSEWHERE

Links of Interest

Internet Trails

Publications

Popular Blog Posts

Ads by Google


Featured Publication