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  • One Less Browser Engine: Opera Switches to WebKit

    Opera will release new versions of their browser for mobile and desktop based on WebKit. They are also going to integrate Chromium.

  • Google Announces PageSpeed Insights 2.0

    Google has released PageSpeed Insights 2.0 with an interface redesign, extensions for Chrome and Firefox, automatic page optimizations with an online service or via SDK, an API, support for mobile devices and more analysis rules.

  • Yahoo! Axis! Of! Incompetence!

    Yahoo! have released a search plugin Axis which allows clients to search for web content with graphical previews rendered on the server. Unfortunately, they also leaked their private Chrome signing key with the Chrome extension. Read on for more.

  • Jetty gets Speedy

    The Jetty project recently announced that Jetty now has SPDY support. InfoQ caught up with Greg Wilkins and Simone Bordet to find out more about the protocol, and what advantages it may bring.

  • Mozilla Mulls H.264 Support

    Historically, Mozilla has rejected the use of non-open codecs (such as H.264), a subject that has been covered before on InfoQ. The main reason is ideological; H.264 is covered by patents and licensed by the MPEG-LA. Could this stance be softening, with the proposal to allow platform-provided codecs for video support?

  • Google Dart Roundup: Dartium Binaries Available, I/O Libraries, Book and Docs

    The first binaries of Dartium, Chrome with a built-in Dart VM, are now available for download. Dartium has the beginnings of debugging support in Dev Tools. Meanwhile, a lot of documentation resources have become available both from Google and outside.

  • Preview the Next JavaScript in Google Chrome

    Google Chrome and V8 now support some of the features planned for the next version of JavaScript, known as ECMAScript 3.1 “Harmony”. To try out these features you can use dev channel release of Chrome with the “Experimental JavaScript features” flag turned on.

  • Joel Webber on Porting Angry Birds to HTML5

    Joel Webber, co-creator of the Google Web Toolkit, held the session Angry Birds on HTML5 at GOTO Aarhus 2011, recorded and published by InfoQ. We interviewed Webber to find out more details on porting the popular game Angry Birds to Google Chrome and HTML 5.

  • Web Intents: Google's Mechanism for Inter WebApp Linking

    Are you spending hours writing custom code to integrate with various third party service providers from your web application? Google's Chrome team is working on a master API for moving the onus from the developer to the user through analogous late run-time binding mechanisms used by the Intents system on the Android OS.

  • Debugging Mobile Web Apps: Weinre and JSConsole Now, Remote WebKit Eventually

    Debuggers in mobile web browsers are anemic at best. InfoQ takes a look at existing workarounds and tools like Weinre and JSConsole, as well as the upcoming changes in mobile browsers that will bring full debugging support. Also: the two mobile browsers that already live in the future and ship remote debugging support.

  • jQuery Mobile Beta 1 Supports Many Browsers and Platforms

    jQuery Mobile has reached the Beta 1 milestone with support for all major browsers and mobile OSes. A final release is expected by the end of the summer.

  • Chrome Browser, Web Store and Chromebook at Google I/O Keynote

    During the second day keynote at Google I/O, there where several important announcements regarding the Chrome Browser, Web Store and Chromebook.  This post from InfoQ’s correspondent at the conference summarizes those new developments.

  • Google Page Speed Goes Online and Mobile

    Google has made Page Speed available online, enhancing it for analyzing web pages targeted at smartphones.

  • Google Explains Chrome Dropping H264

    After last week's announcement that the Chrome team was dropping support for H264, Mike Jazayeri has posted a more detailed explanation of the rationale behind the decision. Others, like the Free Software Foundation, have added their support to the decision.

  • Google Chrome Drops H264 Support

    The Google Chrome team have announced that they will remove H264 support from the HTML5's video tag in Chrome in the next couple of months. Opinions are polarised as to the effect this will have on HTML5 video adoption.

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