Archive for the ‘Web Site News’ Category

Safari 5 Released for Download

Wednesday, June 9th, 2010

Apple has silently released the Safari 5, the next major version of the world’s best browser. Version 5 brings in bunch of new features, notably:

Safari Reader

A readability funciton that has been built into the browser.  If you’re browsing a page that Safari detects an article, it presents you with a “Reader icon”  in the Smart Address Field.  When clicked this then presents you with a ‘Lightboxish’, simple and clean way of continuing to read the article, in one long and continous feed.  I love it!

Greater HTML5 Support

With Apple’s continued support and advertisement of support for HTML5 (ahem Adobe), they’ve included even more features for HTML5 support.  Items noted are full screen view and closed captions for <video> tag, and Geolocation

Better Performance

Apple has integrated a faster Nitro engine that makes Safari 5 30 times faster than its previous version, along with DNS pre-fetching and improved caching.

Bing Search

In addition to the default Google search, Safari have now included Microsoft’s Bing search……should you want it?

What is Google Font API?

Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010

Despite the constant progress in web development and it’s technologies, there’s still one simple area that lacks and until now, has always frustrated me.  What am I referring to?  Web Typography!  Although there potentially thousands of typefaces to choose from, unless you have them installed on the computer you are reading this blog on (and chances are they’re not), as a Web Designer/Developer, I can’t use them which frustrates the hell out of me.

Enter our saviour, Google Font API!  Why somebody didn’t think of this earlier beats me, but Google have very kindly introduced Google Font Directory and Google Font API, a free web service that allows web sites to display and use other fonts, high quality open-source fonts, outside of the safe fonts that are common place.

Why use Google Font API?  If you have a web site that you think would benefit from a slightly different font, then Google Font API is the perfect solution. Instead of using images, @font-face is a much more SEO friendly solution and it’s unobtrusive meaning that you don’t need to update your existing content, just the CSS file.  Also, using Google’s servers means you’re off-loading your servers work to to dish up the CSS, over to Google’s reliable infrastructure.

To use the Google service, you simply browse the Font Directory (which will undoubtidly grow in size), and find the font that you would like to use.  Once found, you simply add a link to your CSS file:

<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="http://fonts.googleapis.com/css?family=Font+Name">

Then just use the new font in your CSS file.  Note that I’ve also used a fallback font just in case.  This is known as font stacks.

p {
 font-family: 'Font Name', serif;

}

For my latest “fun” project, www.PredictFootyResults.co.uk, I employed this technique and used the font of ‘Droid Sans’.

Further reading can be found here on Google’s official pages.

Predict Footy Results – World Cup

Sunday, May 30th, 2010

I’ve created a web site, www.PredictFootyResults.co.uk, for the upcoming World Cup, that allows you to predict the results of the games and compete in a League……just for fun!

My aim is to use the same application afterwards for the English Premier League if successful.  I’ve engineered it, so that it’s easy to update, so expect plenty of those.  What I’d really like to do is also extend the current brief stats page.

I’m also open to any “feature” requests, within reason.

It’s free, and only take a moment to join, so please take a look.

CSS3 Cheat Sheet

Monday, May 17th, 2010

The nice people over at GoSquared have created a CSS3 Cheat Sheet, for the most commonly used options.

Print it out, stick it on your wall and go moan at IE ;-)

Link to CSS3 Cheat Sheet

Google release fastest Chrome yet

Wednesday, May 5th, 2010

Today’s new beta release incorporates one of Chrome’s most significant speed and performance increases to date, with 30% and 35% improvement on the V8 and SunSpider benchmarks over the previous beta channel release.

Today’s beta release also includes a handful of new features such as syncing browser preferences, including themes settings, and install extensions while in incognito mode.

Under the hood, today’s release contains the goodness of some new HTML5 features, namely Geolocation APIs, App Cache, web sockets, and file drag-and-drop capabilities. Additionally, this is the first Chrome beta that features initial integration of the Adobe Flash Player plug-in with Chrome, so that you can browse a rich, dynamic web with added security and stability — you’ll automatically receive security and feature updates for Flash Player with Chrome’s auto-update mechanism.

To try out all these new features, download Chrome on the Windows beta channel, or download the Mac or Linux betas.

Source: Google Chrome Blog

The State of Web Development 2010

Tuesday, May 4th, 2010

Keeping track of cur­rent web design and devel­op­ment prac­tice is far from straight­for­ward. We can make some con­jec­tures as to the gen­eral con­sen­sus about best prac­tices from arti­cles pub­lished at rec­og­nized sites and forums devoted to web devel­op­ment, but just what devel­op­ers are actu­ally doing when they develop for the web is much harder to deter­mine. Objective projects like Opera Software’s MAMA can give us a sense of the use of par­tic­u­lar tech­nolo­gies, but it’s more dif­fi­cult to deter­mine when par­tic­u­lar sites were devel­oped (and so to deter­mine how prac­tices change over time), and it’s also dif­fi­cult to con­clude from these objec­tive data the under­ly­ing prac­tices, philoso­phies and approaches adopted by devel­op­ers (for exam­ple, how impor­tant is it to them that pages look as nearly the same as pos­si­ble across all browsers).

Link to PDF


Source: web directions

Chrome moving up the charts

Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010
Yesterday, browser market share figures came out from Net Applications, and the big news is how Chrome is moving up the ranks at the expense of Microsoft’s Internet Explorer and even Firefox, compared to December.  But you have to look further back to get a sense of what is really happening.



The various flavours of Internet Explorer (IE6, IE7, and IE8) together have 62.1 percent market share, down from 68.5 percent last March.  That is a 6.4 percent drop in about a year.  During the same period Chrome went from 1.6 percent share to 5.2 percent.  Firefox and Safari each gained about a percentage point each over the same period to 24.4 percent and 4.5 percent, respectively.  (Although Firefox is a tiny bit down since November, when it peaked at 24.7 percent).  If you add up the gains from those three—Chrome, Firefox, and Safari—that is where most of IE’s share went.

But even that doesn’t tell the whole story because if you look at share of individual versions of the different browsers, you can see another dynamic in play.  Namely, a big part of the share shift can also be explained by the uneven rate at which people abandon older browsers like IE6 for newer ones like IE8 or Chrome.  Let’s look at the share shifts just among IE6, IE7, and IE8.  The pitchforks are out for IE6, people hate it and Websites (especially those run by Google) think the sooner it dies, the better. Even Microsoft wants people to move away from IE6.

IE6’s individual market share has dropped by about 11 points since March, 2009, from 31.4 percent to 20 percent.  Meanwhile, IE8 took almost twice as much share as IE6 lost, it’s up  almost 21 points from almost nothing to 22.4 percent share.  So why did IE show an overall drop?  You can blame poor old IE7, which lost exactly as much as IE8 gained, going from 35.2 percent to 14.5 percent share.

But taken alone, IE8 actually gained more than any other browser during the period (up 20.6 percent), followed by Firefox 3.5 (up 17.1 percent).  Chrome’s 5.2 percent share gain was spread across its Windows and Mac versions.  So IE8 is making stronger gains than you might think from simply looking at the overall IE share numbers.  In fact, in January, it finally surpassed IE6 in market share and is now the largest single browser. As IE6 and IE7 continue to dwindle, IE8 needs to capture as much of those legacy users as it can.  With almost 35 percent share left between them, IE8 will no doubt continue to see rapid individual share growth simply by getting people using older versions of IE to upgrade. It helps that IE8 comes pre-installed with the Windows 7 operating system also.

But those users are also prime targets for Chrome and Firefox (which is still going through its own transition from 3.0 to 3.5).  Chrome, in particular, has the most to gain here.  It only needs another 5 percent to double its market share, whereas IE8 can win over another 20 percent and still see IE’s overall share go down.  It remains an open question where the overall shares will settle when all of this shakes out over the next year or so.

Source: TechCrunch, NetShareMarket

Google phases out support for IE6

Saturday, January 30th, 2010
This has not been the greatest start to the year for Microsoft’s Internet Explorer browser. Days after news of the latest security flaw in Internet Explorer, Google is adding fuel to the fire by phasing out support for IE6 for two of its Google Apps products, Docs and Sites (which recently got an aesthetic upgrade).

For both the consumer and enterprise versions of Google Docs and Sites, the only browsers that will be fully compatible are Microsoft Internet Explorer 7.0+, Mozilla Firefox 3.0+, Google Chrome 4.0+ and Safari 3.0+. The phase out will take place beginning March 1. While you’ll still be able to access Docs and Sites from IE6, you will have restricted functionality and many features won’t work, making the applications for the most part useless. We hear that Google will be phasing out IE6 support for the remainder of Google’s major products, including Gmail and Calendar, over the coming year. This isn’t Google’s first move to phases out IE6 functionality for its products. Last July, the search giant began phasing out YouTube support for the Microsoft browser. For users of IE6, the online video site began pointing to ‘modern’ browsers like Google Chrome, Internet Explorer 8 and Firefox 3.5 as alternatives. A similar prompt will now take place on Docs and Sites for users who are browsing from IE6.

For the most part, the tech community, including web developers and designers, tend to have a profound dislike of Internet Explorer 6. Obviously, the browse has many issues, including low performance and major security flaws. Even Microsoft itself, is recommending that all its customers upgrade to Internet Explorer 8, the latest version of the browser which has better security in place. The main reason why IE6 is still being used at all is because of corporate IT departments across the globe needing to make upgrade decisions. Unfortunately, a number of these companies still have to use the browser because they have systems in place built specifically to run with it. To add insult to injury, IE6 continues to lose market share in the browser world.

And Google isn’t the only technology company that is looking to close off support for IE6. Digg has hinted at wanting to cut support for the browser too. I have a feeling that as Google joins the web in gathering pitchforks around IE6, more companies will flock to join the movement.

Source: TechCrunch

Web Security: Are You Part Of The Problem?

Monday, January 18th, 2010

This is a great article about the most common web security vulnerabilities, from Smashing Magazine.  If your a novice it will probably open your eyes and strike a spear of fear through you, but not to worry.  With a little reserach you’ll be able to overcome most if not all of the covered vulnerabilities and make your site quite secure.  If your an expert, you may find it interesting just what percentages these vulnerabilities are.

Web Security: Are You Part Of The Problem?

OS OpenSpace API

Friday, January 15th, 2010

Yet another mapping API?

The OS OpenSpace API is free to access and lets developers create amazing web applications and online projects with Ordnance Survey maps.

But OS OpenSpace API is not just for developers.

Although the API uses JavaScript to make web pages more interactive, anyone can create an application