Representatives of Microsoft and Adobe on Tuesday both espoused their companies’ love for HTML5 technology at the HTML5 Live conference held within a few blocks of New York’s Times Square, even though ...
After years of going its own way, Microsoft's browser is moving in the right direction: standards, performance, and HTML5 Earlier this month, Microsoft issued its second developer-oriented preview ...
What was Microsoft doing at the recent HTML5 Video Summit in Los Angeles? Explaining to the audience how its video solutions take advantage of HTML5. The session was led by Alex Zambelli, media ...
“The Future of the Web is HTML5,” Microsoft declared. The software giant, in throwing its weight behind the Apple-approved standard, also announced its upcoming Internet Explorer 9 will not use Adobe ...
LAS VEGAS — Microsoft is building a new version of Internet Explorer that will support the HTML5 standard, opening the gates for developers to create more interactive Web sites. The company made the ...
Following Apple co-founder Steve Jobs' comments this week predicting Adobe Flash will fall to open standards like HTML5, the general manager of Microsoft's Internet Explorer browser agreed and said ...
LAS VEGAS — With a stated love for Web standards such as HTML5, Cascading Style Sheets 3 and Scaleable Vector Graphics, Microsoft has released a Platform Preview of Internet Explorer 9, the next ...
Dean Hachamovitch, general manager of the Internet Explorer team, earlier this week said Internet Explorer 9 will support only the H.264 standard for playback of HTML5 video. In a blog post earlier ...
Microsoft on Wednesday updated its rough-edged preview of Internet Explorer 9 (IE9), adding support for several crucial HTML5 standards and boasting that the browser is faster than ever. Last updated ...
Dean Hachamovitch, general manager of the Internet Explorer project at Microsoft, confirmed (again) their support for open web standards and HTML5 as the technology of the future. In a blog post: “The ...
The Web standards world and Microsoft are getting reacquainted with one another. But it's not all kumbaya around the campfire. Stephen Shankland worked at CNET from 1998 to 2024 and wrote about ...
A series of job ads show that Microsoft is building a Skype client for Web browsers, and is looking for developers with HTML5 and JavaScript experience.
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