WHAT I MEAN IS, everything is switching to html5, like youtube. Kieran Little. Email: kieran.little667@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx MSN/windows live: drummerboyrocko0222@xxxxxxxxxx Skype: little_kieran46 yahoo! messenger: little.kieran@xxxxxxxxxxx Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/kieran.little667 Klango: kieranlittle12 Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/dj__k Aol instant messenger A.K.A aim: kieranlittle667 Add my email to GTalk too if you want! On 24/07/2010 13:44, Eleanor Burke wrote:
Where would one use HTML 5. Do you mean it is for a mobile phone or a computer? Eleanor -original message- Subject: [access-uk] Re: html5 v flash From: kieran.little667@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx Date: 24/07/2010 12:24 pm Many devices support flash, but i think html5 is the way to go. Sent from my BrailleNote----- Original Message ----- From: Gordon Keen<gordonkeen@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx To: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Date sent: Sat, 24 Jul 2010 11:31:59 +0100 Subject: [access-uk] html5 v flashPerhaps flash might not be so pervasive in the future?http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/blog/2010/jul/23/html5-flash-ads-quizI can't believe it's not Flash! Can you tell which ads are inHTML5?Make the HTML5 ads go away! Photo by Seeds_of_Peace on Flickr.Some rights reservedCover your eyes, AdBlock users: the future of the web is here,and it includes adverts.Unless of course you reckon that Adobe's Flash is always going toreign supreme when it comes to creating animated content online, so that the combination of HTML5 and CSS3 will just never become important, or that browsers capable of displaying HTML5/CSS3 content won't become pervasive enough for it to matter.But if you don't... over at sencha.com, you can now - assumingyou're using a sufficiently modern browser - take a quiz: see if you can spot which one of the pairs of ads is done in Flash, and which is done in HTML5/CSS3. (We're not hosting them here because (a) that would be rude (b) it would be a huge hassle getting the path to the CSS files right. Off you go and take the quiz.)Obviously, this is quite easy to figure out if you have a Flashblocker installed (or are on a platform that doesn't provide Flash - hello pretty much everyone on mobile), or if you have a browser that's not capable of displaying HTML5. But if you view it on Firefox, Chrome, Safari or Opera, you may find it tough to call.This is encouraging, or scary, depending on your viewpoint: ifdesigners can do things with HTML5/CSS3 that they used to need Flash for, then blocking out the messages (which has been a topic of heated debate from time to time) that help to pay for some ads become much more difficult - because it's all just HTML. (Though perhaps you then start to have "CSS-blocking" parsers which will watch for things such as ":hover" and "-animation-duration" in the CSS file - see for example the content of http://www.sencha.com/deploy/css3-ads/hertz/style.css, used for the Hertz ad recreation.The details, if you're interested, of how to do the recreationsare on another Sencha blogpost. Would-be HTML5 designers, take note. ** To leave the list, click on the immediately-following link:- ** [mailto:access-uk-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx?subject=unsubscribe] ** If this link doesn't work then send a message to: ** access-uk-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx ** and in the Subject line type ** unsubscribe ** For other list commands such as vacation mode, click on the ** immediately-following link:- ** [mailto:access-uk-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx?subject=faq] ** or send a message, to ** access-uk-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with the Subject:- faq ** To leave the list, click on the immediately-following link:- ** [mailto:access-uk-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx?subject=unsubscribe] ** If this link doesn't work then send a message to: ** access-uk-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx ** and in the Subject line type ** unsubscribe ** For other list commands such as vacation mode, click on the ** immediately-following link:- ** [mailto:access-uk-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx?subject=faq] ** or send a message, to ** access-uk-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with the Subject:- faq --- avast! Antivirus: Inbound message clean. Virus Database (VPS): 100724-0, 24/07/2010 Tested on: 24/07/2010 13:58:02 avast! - copyright (c) 1988-2010 AVAST Software. http://www.avast.com
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