Among the expected topics: #3D graphics and the role of #WebGPU, multithreading, #WebAssembly, cloud-based gaming in the browser, game input, #WebAudio, etc.
That isn't to say all their needs are covered, and with the continuous innovation in this space, this #W3CWorkshop opens up an opportunity for the Games and Web people to determine together what priorities the Open Web Platform needs to address.
The updated charter has now been approved! w3.org/2019/03/devices-senso…
What do we want? A maintained Geolocation API!
When do we want it? Now!
Where do we want it? 📍
If you want to help the #Web keep track of its own history, the @w3c Web History #CommunityGroup collects valuable information such as software, documents, testimonials, etc. This group is open to all, so if you have a resource to share, please do so! w3.org/community/webhistory/
Last month, some of these brilliant developers/designers and others were asked to show how pages would look in WorldWideWeb by rebuilding its UI and rendering in HTML/CSS/JS. Anyone can play with it at worldwideweb.cern.ch/browser - try to open a URL! 😁worldwideweb.cern.ch/images/…
In 2013, @CERN convened 12 Web developers, designers, writers, standardistas, and technologists to rebuild the line-mode browser in the modern #browsers. Read the #MakingOf: line-mode.cern.ch/makingof/
The #Web was invented on 12 March 1989, but by the end of 1990, @timberners_lee had written the WorldWideWeb which was both a reader and an editor of Web pages
As you may know, today is the 30th anniversary of the World Wide Web. Hooray! #Web30#ForTheWeb So, let's look at a really important part of its history: Did you know, from the start, the very first web browser was designed to help you read *and write* the web? This is IMPORTANT.
Web is 30, I've been helping its evolution since 1995 at @w3c. I first started with CSS and PNG integration in Arena, then worked on HTTP., and currently on the @w3ctag. What a ride!
Thanks @timberners_lee for the vision and the goal of making the Web truly for all. #Web30
So.. I started a blog. I started trying to contrib on mailing lists. I saw a lot of good conversation coming from other developers. jQuery in particular, had folks like @wycats@paul_irish@addyosmani that I found myself agreeing with a lot. @slightlylate had interesting topics
I worked on ebook QA for @Wiley and I quickly learned that the only way to understand #epub was to read the specs written by IDPF, then keeper of the standards.