Some really, really nice additions and changes to both the functionality and design of my favorite browser debugging tool. Visit site »
Talk about scratching your own itch… Visit site »
Oh man, this looks sweet. I’ll say it again: the WebKit team is totally doing the right thing here by continuing to innovate with these new features. Dear WebKit: web designers everywhere thank you! Visit site »
WebKit now includes support for gradients specified in CSS. The syntax looks a bit confusing for us designerly types, but massive kudos to the WebKit team for continuing to embrace the “browser wars” mentality, offering exciting new toys for designers and developers to play with, while at the same time maintaing interoperability with other browsers. Now, if we could just get Opera, Mozilla, and Microsoft on board, we’d probably see some fast and furious innovation in the CSS arena. Visit site »
Here’s to innovation among browser makers! Nice work, WebKit. Mozilla and Opera, where you at? Visit site »
I continue to loves me some WebKit. These guys are the designer’s best friend — they are really focusing on implementing the parts of CSS that really matter to designers, which is awesome (unless, of course, you’re a JavaScript programmer). :) Visit site »
Dave Hyatt, the main man behind Safari, notes (as others have) that the iPhone could signal the end of the “mobile web” as a separate concept from the “regular old web.” Visit site »
WebKit’s inspector now supports a sweet box model visual representation and some other goodies. It looks like us web developers who prefer Safari may not have to keep Firefox and Firebug around for debugging all that much longer… Visit site »
I’m surprised it too this long, but there’s finally a WebKit-based browser project for Windows. Awesome. Visit site »
I don’t expect Shiira to ever become a major player in the browser space, but damn I sure won’t complain if Apple incorporates a few of these UI enhancements into Safari. Very sexy-looking indeed. Visit site »
Safari’s answer to Firefox’s DOM Inspector looks to be another great tool for web developers. This may just be what I need to make Safari my full-time development browser. Visit site »
Dave Hyatt announces that Apple’s WebKit (the rendering engine supporting Safari) is now fully open-sourced. This could be the most exciting announcement of WWDC! Who’s going to be the first enterprising Windows developer to release a WebKit-based browser Visit site »