It occurs to me that my recent post about devicePixelRatio was a bit cryptic and short. So I will givde some extra examples in this post. Also, I did some additional research that takes screen.width into account. Remember the definition: devicePixelRatio is the ratio between physical pixels and device-independent pixels (dips) on the device. devicePixelRatio = physical pixels / dips Here is the te
OK, so now we have the rumour that Facebook is going to buy Opera. That would be unexpected. And interesting. In this entry I’m going to pretend the news is true, even though that’s not certain yet, because it is a good starting point for some serious strategic thinking. What is Facebook buying? So. What exactly is Facebook buying here? The obvious answer is that it’s buying the largest (or second
It’s time for the quarterly mobile browser statistics from 12 selected countries according to StatCounter. This post treats the first six countries; the second six will appear next week. Your donation for keeping this series up and running would be much appreciated. Headlines More than half of the website hits from Nigeria are mobile. Mobile growth in developing countries continues unabated, but s
This is getting frustrating. The official CSS WG blog: Discussed problem of WebKit monopoly on mobile and the consequent pressure for other engines to implement -webkit- properties. Zeldman: Webkit monoculture: threat or menace? Guys, stop it. This is simplistic us vs. them thinking. It’s not helpful. Now if you would say there’s an iPhone monoculture among web developers, you’d be right. But whos
See section 7C of the book. The W3C model is supported by Mozilla, Safari, Konqueror, and iCab. The Microsoft model is supported by Explorer 5+ on Windows. Opera supports both models. On this page I explain the two advanced event registration models: W3C’s and Microsoft’s. Since neither is cross–browser supported, their use is, for the moment, deprecated. W3C and Microsoft have both developed thei
Credits wholly go to Michael McGrady, who invented this technique. A browser must support opacity to support this technique. Therefore it doesn't work in Explorer 5.0 on Windows, Explorer 5 on Mac and Opera. A reader suggested adding a keyup event to the real input box so that you can copy the text the user types to the fake one. This page has been translated into Chinese and Italian. Of all form
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