HTML5 Please is a new site reflecting the suitability of the latest Web Standards that are still works in progress. It’s somewhat similar to Can I Use.
Table of compatibility showing Browsers vs Web APIs.
Note JS screencast tutorials.
A detailed review of what web browsers currently do.
Twitter’s library and layout guidelines for a quick-to-prototype app – perfect for experimental design.
Some background thoughts on “Responsive Web Design” (i.e. one of the things I espouse during web design lectures). If the web page contains the information and the CSS describes they layout, then it’s hard to do anything but a design that is responsive.
Some notes on HTML page structures that dynamically reflow on devices with differently sized screens.
A brief look at Usability vs Accessibility.
Very cute indeed. An autosuggest client & service for jQuery that provides renderable objects with detailed info.
nother great video in the YUI Theatre series, this time on HTML5 Audio.
codepo8 waxes um, poetic, at the Web2Day conference.
Maqetta, a components based IDE for lazy (good lazy) javascript & html5 application creation.
So what next fo XML? Some useful thoughts on the design decisins that hamstrung XML and how a break from SGML and rigorous syntax may be desirable.
Ten (emerging) common differences between mobile and desktop websites. I’d not agree with all of them 100%, but some good thinking material.
Microsoft prototype browsers.
Philip Jägenstedt’s take on the RDFa / Microformats / Microdata issues.
Shelley Powers muses on the RDFa vs Microdata conundrum
The arguments for, against and between using RDFa or HTML5′s microdata format.
Norm Walsh eloquently sums up the WHATWG -vs- W3C problems and puts them into a future of HTML and XML context