Remove Firefox Remove Google Remove Internet Remove Web
article thumbnail

SaaS & Web App Accessibility Checklist: 5 Steps to Inclusion

Hurix Digital

Today, the Internet or SaaS solutions are not just for tech geeks. However, inaccessible web applications or SaaS products create a barrier for people with disabilities. The longer your web apps or SaaS solutions are non-accessible, the more vulnerable they are to legal action. Their user experience becomes less intuitive.

Web 52
article thumbnail

Usability and Networks

Clark Quinn

As I mentioned in an earlier post , I have been using Safari and Google to traverse the networks. And in a comment, I mentioned that the recent launch of the new Firefox browser was prompting me to switch. The rationale for the switch is that I don’t completely trust Google and Apple with my data. On principle.

Network 101
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Inclusive Website Development: A Step-by-Step Guide

Hurix Digital

These figures are alarming, especially given the growing emphasis on improving web accessibility through WCAG standards. In this scenario, we would want our business website to be web accessibility-compliant and cater to all users, regardless of their abilities. Compared to 2021, there were 12% more lawsuits filed in this year.

Website 40
article thumbnail

How to Convert Flash-Based Websites to HTML5 Right Now!

Hurix Digital

Over the years, Adobe Flash-ActionScript and HTML-JavaScript-CSS based development have been used as two of the main approaches for websites and other front-end web-based applications. Support of Responsive Web Design (RWD). It is a free web editor for Flash to HTML5 conversion. Functions without any browser plug-in.

article thumbnail

The changing shape of the internet

Clive on Learning

Chris Anderson’s article The web is dead: long live the internet , in the August edition of Wired magazine, has attracted a lot of attention, including mine, but for many the title of the article would mean very little. The opening question asks, “When was the World Wide Web officially launched?”, As we know, they are not.

article thumbnail

Mobile Learning and Interactivity

Vikas Joshi on Interactive Learning

Firefox doesn’t support H.264 264 format, while Safari will only support that, and Google introduced the new WebM standard but supports both WebM and H.264 So then comes the debate of whether Native or Web apps and Flash or HTML5. Flash and HTML5 options exist for web apps. 264 formats. If so, native app makes sense.

article thumbnail

Pressure mounting to lose Flash in Web content

Aptara

Pressure mounting to lose Flash in Web content. The struggle of HTML5 against Flash is one of the Internet's current main elements. Flash is the entrenched choice, due to its longtime presence on Web pages. However, ever since Apple threw down the gauntlet and ditched the standard in its devices, the field has seemed wide open.

Flash 40