Google's Amazing Browser Experiments
Barence writes "On the day that Microsoft launches Internet Explorer 8, Google has unveiled a new site that showcases the Javascript performance of its Chrome browser. Called Chrome Experiments, the site includes 19 extraordinary animated games and widgets that push the browser to its limits. One experiment, called Browser Ball allows you to 'throw' a bouncing ball from one browser window to the next. Google Gravity, on the other hand, collapses the normal Google homepage into a pile at the bottom of the screen. However, you can still enter search terms into the box and watch the results drop from the top of the browser window."
On the day Microsoft releases IE 8 -- the most popular web browser in the world -- Slashdot doesn't mention it, but posts a trivial article about Google Chrome benchmarks.
So, there may be no IE 8 story, but this one is hardly trivial. The things Google did in these benchmarks were previously only done in Flash. This is a major breakthrough in developing an alternative to Flash.
One of our competitors trademarked the term "hypothesis". From now on, we will call them "boneheaded ideas".
If you have Firefox 3.1:
http://tinyvid.tv/
Real time Chroma-Key replacement: https://developer.mozilla.org/samples/video/chroma-key/index.xhtml
(Let's see you do THAT in Flash!)
Please be gentle with my server, but here's my own Chroma-Key experiments for Firefox 3.1b3:
http://iambatman.homeip.net/html5/index.xhtml
Click "Play", then mess with the "Chroma Key", "Invert", and "Mute" buttons to your heart's delight.
(The video is a random green screen video pulled off of Youtube.)
Note that this should work in Safari 4 with the OGG plugin. Unfortunately, the OGG plugin is out of date for Windows. It would be easy to configure MP4 as a fallback for Safari, but I haven't gotten that far yet. :P
Javascript + Nintendo DSi = DSiCade