http://hacks.mozilla.org/2010/07/firefox4-beta2/
Wouldn't it be cool to make use of some of this tech on our website (HTML5 + CSS3 transitions/transforms) with appropriate fallbacks for other browsers?
Easy for me to say since I don't know how to write it. But maybe those of you with design smarts can think of neat ways we could make use of the advanced features coming out in Firefox 4.
On 07/28/2010 03:11 AM, Paul W. Frields wrote:
http://hacks.mozilla.org/2010/07/firefox4-beta2/
Wouldn't it be cool to make use of some of this tech on our website (HTML5 + CSS3 transitions/transforms) with appropriate fallbacks for other browsers?
There is automatic fallback and I tested it with Epiphany in Fedora 13 since WebKit already supports this for a while and the difference is rather stark. Transition in the latest Firefox in Fedora 13 is abrupt while Epiphany does it very smoothly and I assume Firefox 4 beta 2 also does it smoothly. We might have to use such effects in a minimal nice way rather than go overboard with it.
Rahul
On Wed, Jul 28, 2010 at 03:28:07AM +0530, Rahul Sundaram wrote:
On 07/28/2010 03:11 AM, Paul W. Frields wrote:
http://hacks.mozilla.org/2010/07/firefox4-beta2/
Wouldn't it be cool to make use of some of this tech on our website (HTML5 + CSS3 transitions/transforms) with appropriate fallbacks for other browsers?
There is automatic fallback and I tested it with Epiphany in Fedora 13 since WebKit already supports this for a while and the difference is rather stark. Transition in the latest Firefox in Fedora 13 is abrupt while Epiphany does it very smoothly and I assume Firefox 4 beta 2 also does it smoothly. We might have to use such effects in a minimal nice way rather than go overboard with it.
"Minimal" + "nice" is always a good way to go with design, IMHO. ;-)
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