The Seven Parts of “HTML 5 Fundamentals” by Greg Duncan.
From the post:
It’s Web Wednesday and today we’re going to take a step back and share a series by David Giard, who’s going to give us a fundamental look at HTML5. Oh, I know YOU don’t need this, but you might have a "friend" who does (cough… like me… cough…).
HTML 5 Fundamentals
Read this series of articles to learn more about HTML5 and CSS3
Part 1 has this jewel:
Due to the enormous scope of HTML5 and the rate at which users tend to upgrade to new browsers, it is unlikely that HTML5 will be on all computers for another decade.
Let’s see, a web “year” is approximately 3 months according to Tim Berners-Lee, so in forty (40) web years, HTML5 will be on all computers.
That’s a long time to wait so I would suggest learning features as they are supported by the top three browsers. You won’t ever be terribly behind and at the same time, your webpages wit
That would make an interesting listing if it doesn’t exist already. The features of HTML5 as a matrix against the top three browsers.
Legend for the matrix: One browser – start learning, Two browsers – start writing, Three browsers – deploy.
Yes?
I first saw this in a tweet by Microsoft Channel 9.