I took 20 minutes and added a feature request to my SVG Web Stats web application tonight: Now you can switch the timeline graph from Traffic mode to Distribution mode, which shows the share of each browser on my site as a percentage of the total. Click To Read More...
Archive for the ‘Safari’ Category
Apple’s Web Inventions
Friday, April 25th, 2008The last two years have been explosive for WebKit development - the project has really accelerated, moving at a much faster perceivable rate than the other notable open-source web platform, Mozilla. I’ve been noticing more and more innovations that affect web developers from the Safari blog. Click To Read More...
Webkit Nightly: Not Smiling
Wednesday, March 26th, 2008After the announcement that the Apple developers have turned on their SMIL support in order to pass Acid3 test, I was excited enough to download the MacOS nightly and run through the SVG animation test suite. I was pretty disappointed. Click To Read More...
Bugs From New Theme
Wednesday, February 20th, 2008Sander asked me to post a list of bugs that I found as a result of working on my new theme. Here they are. Click To Read More...
New XHTML+SVG Theme
Monday, February 18th, 2008I’ve been tinkering at a new theme for my website since the Christmas holidays and finally got around to flipping the switch this weekend. I decided to try my hand, for the first time, at real XHTML served as application/xhtml+xml but with PHP content negotiation to text/html for poor ol’ Internet Explorer. Click To Read More...
Webkit Nightly Builds for Windows - Working?
Wednesday, January 9th, 2008Every so often I find some time to update my SVG Support page with results from a more recent nightly build of Firefox. Tonight I tried to do the same thing for WebKit nightlies and ran into difficulties in Windows. Click To Read More...
Let It Snow… Again
Saturday, December 1st, 2007Just like last year, December 1st is supposed to be Chicago’s first snowstorm. So I’ve turned on the snow in my blog header. Now you can keep warm by hovering around your CPU.
I was looking at the comments from last year’s entry and it’s good to see that we’ve now seen definite progress from Safari’s side on the whole SVG front. Still no word from IE though ![]()