Posts Tagged: Internet
The first HTML5 mobile app framework
One of the major aspects of HTML5 is its potential to replace native mobile apps and bridging barriers between various mobile platforms. This could very well be developed into the ultimate portable technology for mobile devices and provide the developer with more time for better implementation rather than worrying about bridging cross platforms. Sencha Touch – the first HTML5 mobile framework is an exciting step in this direction.
Here are some of the more impressive features of the framework.
- HTML5 Geolocation
- Sench Touch icon set
- JSONP Proxy
- YQL Data Proxy
- Momentum scrolling
- Scroll touch event
- Pop-up Overlays
- Mobile form elements
- CSS3 Gradients
- CSS3 Transitions
- Multi-Card Layout
- Tab Panel Component
- Scrollable list view
- Swappable headers
New era of the web – HTML5
There are more than enough hype about more than enough things in the world that don’t really matter and just that…hype. HTML5 is the latest hype in websphere and already has been a cause for fights among titans. However for anyone who loves web, it can’t be helped that HTML5 is at least a novelty and for most part offers things that web designers and developers alike have been dreaming about. So here goes a set of sources that would be useful to anyone interested in the topic.
JS libraries that changed the perception of Java Script
Remember the old age (not far behind… just few years ago) where you had to type a whole bunch of codes just to add a new row to your HTML table ? I’ve almost forgotten that era with the convenience added through some of these libraries.
Friends don’t let friends use IE6
Bad news for web designers and developers.
According to the most recent data from California-based Web metrics company Net Applications, 27.2% of all Internet users are still running IE6, making it the most popular version of IE. By comparison, IE7 accounted for 23.1% of all browsers in action last month, while the newest edition, IE8, had a usage share of 12.5%.
No such thing as a Google killer
Whenever there’s a new search start-up the hype also follows that there’s a “Google Killer”. Here are few words from a new search start-up itself.
So let’s just get this out of the way: there is no such thing as a Google killer. No company is going to play David to their Goliath and slay them with a well-aimed stone from a slingshot. Google is here to stay.
Google’s PHP performance tips attract ire from PHP world
Earlier this week, Google posted on how to make PHP performance better as step of their campaign to “make the web faster”, but has given some noteworthy tips (such as avoiding SQL querying within a loop) as well as some insignificant ideas.
This may have been ignored if it was published in some other source, but since it’s endorsed by Google, PHP community has taken a special interest and rebuffed some of these so called tips.
A Note on Google’s So-called Best Practices
Make the Web Faster – Google groups
PHP performance tips from Google
An interesting study on Twitter
A study on Twitter, with some very intriguing findings.
Just 10% of Twitter users generate more than 90% of the content, a Harvard study of 300,000 users found.
Estimates suggest it now has more than 10 million users and is growing faster than any other social network.
Top 20 in YouTube so far
From the Dancing Baby of the 1990s to the phenomenon that is Susan Boyle, the web has seen its share of viral video sensations. However, these 20 are the cream of the crop. They have been seen by millions and discussed by millions more. Many of them are part of not only Internet culture, but mainstream culture too. Here are the top 20 YouTube (YouTube reviews) and video memes in chronological order.
A unique visitor or a device ?
Controversy surrounding unique visitors, a core metric of Web analytics, has raised its head again. In a recent blog post, Web analytics consultant and author Eric Peterson called on the Web analytics industry to stop using the term “unique visitors” because it doesn’t accurately reflect what’s actually being measured.
WWW hits 20
Some of WWW’s memorable moments on its way to success.
In March 1989, Tim Berners-Lee submitted a paper called “Information Management: a Proposal” to his supervisor Mike Sendall. This document, called “vague, but exciting” by Sendall, became the blueprint for the World Wide Web which launched the following year.


