Posts Tagged ‘HTML5’

The HTML5 Readiness Chart Highlights How Well Your Browser Handles the Future [Infographic]

Thursday, May 13th, 2010
We've said for a while that HTML5 will change the way you use the web, but not all browsers are ready for the big change. This interactive chart highlights which features are still missing in your browser of choice. More »


Embed HTML5 Videos with Multi-Browser Support on Your Site [HTML5]

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010
If you've got a blog, personal site, or another web platform and find yourself wondering how you can get in on the no-plugin-needed streaming video in HTML5, Webmonkey has a handy guide to understanding and embedding HTML5 videos on your site. More »



HTML5 - HTML - Data Formats - Markup Languages - Flash

YouTube Offers No-Flash HTML5 Videos for Chrome and Safari [Streaming Video]

Thursday, January 21st, 2010

If you're running Chrome or Safari as your main browser, Google's now offering up YouTube videos without Flash. That's right—fewer system hangs, browser crashes, and other issues, and just straight-up video through HTML5 standards.

Google has previously allowed Chrome, Safari, and Internet-Explorer-using-Chrome-Frame browsers to try out a few HTML5 video demos at its site, but now Google's given you the option to always play videos through the h.264 codec, if they're available. If they have ads, or aren't available in h.264, YouTube will serve up the standard Flash player—though that's been upgraded, too, with a nice video format chooser in the lower-right corner.

The notable missing piece here is Firefox. Firefox does support HTML5's video streaming through Ogg Theora, a non-patented, license-free codec that its makers consider more free, while Google, and Apple, have moved their sites and browsers toward supporting h.264 streaming.

Enough web politics! If you're rocking Chrome, Safari, or Chrome Frame inside IE, head to YouTube's HTML5 page to sign yourself into the beta. If you're signed up for other YouTube lab projects in the TestTube section, you might want to sign yourself out of them—except for Feather, which works fine with HTML5 and makes it even lighter and snappier.

Is HTML5-powered YouTube a better fit for your browsing? Like the Flash player better? Tell us your take in the comments.

Introducing YouTube HTML5 Supported Videos [YouTube Blog via Google Operating System]