Baker
Baker is a HTML5 ebook framework to publish interactive books & magazines on iPad & iPhone using simply open web standards.
See also: Laker
You got a book you want to make available as a web/native app? Enjoy.
Reblogged Via: decodering
GO AWAY
Baker
Baker is a HTML5 ebook framework to publish interactive books & magazines on iPad & iPhone using simply open web standards.
See also: Laker
You got a book you want to make available as a web/native app? Enjoy.
Reblogged Via: decodering
Smart Car USA html5 scrolling/parallax site.
So I was listening to some good ol’ Andrew Gold (he did the Golden Girls song, don’t hate) on Grooveshark and I saw this smart car ad.
This is a really awesome site. I’m almost convinced to help the environment and get one. Then I remember I’m six feet tall, weigh over 200 pounds, and generally like to be comfortable whilst I drive.
Badass site though. Check it out.
(By the way Grooveshark has the best media/ad placment designs I’ve seen on music sites.)
We’re pleased to announce a wide range of new features and enhancements – including HTML5 support – coming in Kindle Format 8 (KF8). KF8 is the next generation file format for Kindle books – replacing Mobi 7. As showcased on Kindle Fire, KF8 enables publishers to create great-looking books in categories that require rich formatting and design such as children’s picture books, comics & graphic novels, technical & engineering books and cookbooks. Kindle Format 8 replaces the Mobi format and adds over 150 new formatting capabilities, including fixed layouts, nested tables, callouts, sidebars and Scalable Vector Graphics, opening up more opportunities to create Kindle books that readers will love.
I knew I made the right choice for sticking with the kindle app over nook and iBooks. THERE CAN BE ONLY ONE! “heeeeeeeere we are..masters of the universssssssse”
Reblogged Via: decodering
WebGL X-Wing
Surprisingly good fun. Made with three.js.
Be a rebel. Fight the empire. All with html5 and javascript. IN 3D. I found myself yelling at the screen in anger every time I blew up. haha
Reblogged Via: decodering
Remember the Duck Hunt game on the Nintendo in the 1980s? It’s back, on the Web, all thanks to JavaScript and HTML5. All it’s missing is the NES Zapper gun attachment but it’s still reasonably tricky even with the mouse.
YES. I love the replaced sound effects. They’re hilarious. Very creative application of html5 and javascript. That damn dog, is still a damn dog.
Reblogged Via: Front End Development - Greg Babula