Raindrop.io Bookmarks 09/20/2024
著
- Something went wrong - Ways out of the JavaScript crisis
"What I am missing and what could improve the situation are common goals across JavaScript frameworks"
- XR Accessibility: for people with seeing disabilities - TetraLogical
"XR allows people to experience immersive environments. We must create these environments in a way that includes the needs of people with seeing disabilities. This can be done by providing means to identify and query content, text to speech description, navigation prompts, context descriptions, personalisation, and zoom features."
- Building a browser using Servo as a web engine! - Servo, the embeddable, independent, memory-safe, modular, parallel web rendering engine
"This year, @wusyong, a member of Servo TSC, created the Verso project as a way to explore the features Servo needs to power a robust web browser. In this post, we'll explain what we tried to achieve, what we found, and what's next for building a browser using Servo as a web engine."
- Feedback needed: How should we define CSS masonry? | Blog | Chrome for Developers
"The CSS Working Group has combined the two CSS masonry proposals into one draft specification. The group hopes that this will make it easier to compare the two, and make a final decision. The Chrome team still believes that a separate masonry syntax would be the best way to proceed."
- The already-here future of prototyping | Brad Frost
"The ability to rapidly prototype in code -- now supercharged by the introduction of LLM tools -- brings us closer to truly designing for the web medium. It democratizes the process, allows more people to express ideas in code, makes it easier to consider the medium's opportunities and constraints, and gets ideas further down the line faster than ever."
- Accessibility education and outreach: Another milestone in W3C's 30-year history and evolution | 2024 | Blog | W3C
"As W3C celebrates 30 years, we also celebrate the success of the Accessibility Education and Outreach Working Group (EOWG), share news of its closure, and look forward to a new chapter in W3C accessibility work."