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  1. Project Silk

    Editor’s Note: An earlier version of this post appeared on Mason Chang’s personal blog. For the past few months, I’ve been working on Project Silk which improves smoothness across the browser. Very much like Project Butter for Android, part of it is finally live on Read more…

  2. You can’t go wrong watching JavaScript talks

    Late last week, I was collecting suggestions for year-end Hacks blog posts. As she headed out for the winter holidays, apps engineer Soledad Penadés gifted me “a bunch of cool talks I watched this year.” In fact, it’s a curated collection of presentations from JSConf, Read more…

  3. Videos and Firefox OS

    Before HTML5 Those were dark times Harry, dark times – Rubeus Hagrid Before HTML5, displaying video on the Web required browser plugins and Flash. Luckily, Firefox OS supports HTML5 video so we don’t need to support these older formats. Video support on the Web Even Read more…

  4. Distributed On-the-Fly Image Processing and Open Source at Vimeo

    When you think of Vimeo, you probably think of video — after all, it’s what we do. However, we also have to handle creation and distribution a lot of images: thumbnails, user portraits, channel headers, and all the various awesome graphics around Vimeo, to name Read more…

  5. Building Interactive HTML5 Videos

    The HTML5 <video> element makes embedding videos into your site as easy as embedding images. And since all major browsers support <video> since 2011, it’s also the most reliable way to get your moving pictures seen by people. A more recent addition to the HTML5 Read more…

  6. Adding captions and subtitles to HTML5 video

    This article is also available on MDN. With the introduction of the <video> and <audio> elements to HTML5, we finally have a native way to add video and audio to our websites. We also have a JavaScript API that allows us to interact with this Read more…

  7. Inside the Party Bus: Building a Web App with Multiple Live Video Streams + Interactive Graphics

    Gearcloud Labs is exploring the use of open technologies to build new kinds of shared video experiences. Party Bus is a demo app that mixes multiple live video streams together with interactive graphics and synchronized audio. We built it using a combination of node.js, WebSockets, Read more…

  8. It's a wrap! "App Basics for FirefoxOS" is out and ready to get you started

    A week ago we announced a series of video tutorials around creating HTML5 apps for Firefox OS. Now we released all the videos and you can watch the series in one go. Photo by Olliver Hallmann The series is aimed at web developers who want Read more…

  9. App basics for Firefox OS – a screencast series to get you started

    Over the next few days we’ll release a series of screencasts explaining how to start your first Open Web App and develop for Firefox OS. Each of the screencasts is terse enough to watch in a short break and the whole series should not take Read more…

  10. Firefox OS Security: Part 1 – The Web Security Model

    When presenting Firefox OS to people, security is a big topic. Can an operating system built on web technologies be secure? What has Mozilla built in to avoid drive-by downloads and malware? In this two part video series Christian Heilmann (@codepo8), principal evangelist of Mozilla, Read more…