By: bstewart
FYI, it doesn’t appear to be functioning as described in Safari for Windows using Vista Home Basic.
View ArticleBy: Mark Rowe
If something is not working correctly you should file a bug report. Be sure to double-check that you are in fact testing with a nightly build.
View ArticleBy: Jakob Peterhänsel
Wow, way cool. One thing that pops up in my mind, without having made a test other that with this page: Does the element in question (like, in a fade-out) still receive events? It seems so on example...
View ArticleBy: Brad
In the first example, it seems to fade in much quicker than it fades out. Is that just an illusion? BTW, I think this is fantastic work!
View ArticleBy: caesarsgrunt
I understand what you’re saying about providing these features for OS X’s sake even if they don’t get standardised, and in principle I think that’s great (though of course, I really hope they do get...
View ArticleBy: caesarsgrunt
Another question – sorry! Is there a reference of ‘experimental’ -webkit- css anywhere, other than scattered through this blog? It would be great if there was – sort of like Mozilla have, but hopefully...
View ArticleBy: Surfin’ Safari - Blog Archive » CSS Animation at Nuclear Blog
[...] Surfin’ Safari – Blog Archive » CSS Animation We have another cool new CSS feature to talk about: animation specified in CSS. [...]
View ArticleBy: pohl
What do I need to view this page in in order to see these effects for myself? It appears that I’m only seeing the degraded behaviour. I have tried Safari 3.0.3 (522.12.1) on Tiger, and Safari 3.0.4...
View ArticleBy: Mark Rowe
As previously mentioned: These features are only available in nightly builds of WebKit at this point. Visit nightly.webkit.org and grab the latest build to try them out.
View Article
More Pages to Explore .....