Crocodoc allows you to upload your PDFs, Word and PowerPoint documents and convert them into HTML5 so you can easily embed them on your own sites. The company, which has converted over 60 million ...
The main object of HTML5 specification is to transfer playback of multimedia video and audio to the browser itself without installing additional plug-ins. However, browser developers cannot decide on ...
Cloud storage company Box has acquired HTML5 document embedding service and Y Combinator alum Crocodoc, both companies announced in a press briefing today. Financial terms of the deal, which was a ...
Lost in the hoopla last October, when Adobe telegraphed its intent to play nice with HTML5 during the Adobe MAX conference, was a sneak peak demonstration of a Flash-to-HTML5 converter, codenamed ...
Adobe has finally released a tool allowing developers to convert Flash content to HTML5 format used by Apple’s iPad, iPhone and iPod touch. The pre-release version of the ‘Wallaby’ conversion route ...
Over the past few years the need has steadily grown for presentations to be delivered wherever and whenever users want to view them. Along with PCs and laptops, this has increasingly meant iPad and ...
HTML5 may one day be the future of rich interactive Web content and advertising, but at the moment Adobe Flash remains the tool of choice for designers everywhere. That’s a problem when exciting new ...
Adobe has released for free download an experimental Flash-to-HTML5 converter to the development community through beta technology site, Adobe Labs. The tool, dubbed Wallaby, is a cross-platform Adobe ...
Adobe today released a tool, codenamed Wallaby, that converts Flash to HTML5. After the drama surrounding the company’s Flash to iPhone conversion tool, Adobe is taking another crack at keeping Flash ...
Adobe showed off a prototype Flash-to-HTML5 converter last October, and now it's released an experimental Labs version for all to try. The tool, called Wallaby will enable developers to convert their ...
Apple has been at war with Flash for some time now—in fact, it’s persona non grata on iOS devices in lieu of hardware-accelerated, Johnny-come-lately HTML5. As a result, Adobe’s Flash gets left in the ...