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Wednesday 18 March 2009

CSS3 Panel Slides from SXSWi

These are the CSS3 panel slides from SXSW Interactive. As the moderator, I apologize to the 40+ people who could not get into the room. It was a really informative and fun panel, so we’ve made these slides available to the public at large to extend that information.

Please enjoy and be sure to try things out in a variety of browsers. Feel free to share your comments and thoughts here.

Filed under:   CSS3, conferences, ie8, innovation, microsoft, mozilla, opera, software, sxsw, web design and development
Posted by:   Molly | 14:25 | Comments (15)

15 Responses to “CSS3 Panel Slides from SXSWi”

  1. MediaMarc says:

    Thanks Molly,
    This will be a good resource for me. Got to keep of with trends and step up my CSS3 game.

  2. Jens Wedin says:

    Thanks Molly for us that can’t be there. I tried David’s presentation in FF2 and most examples looked kind of funny :) I also tried IE6 and the xhtml files only wanted to be downloaded, hehe. I’m behind a firewall on a large corp so I can’t upgrade.

  3. Tyler says:

    I didn’t know about word-wrap: break-word;

    How nerdy is it that I’m ultra excited for it when it hasn’t ever really been an issue so far?

  4. [...] Three great presentations/panels on day 3. Leah Buley showed very inspiring ideas about what you could do when you’re a team of one and that it’s always a good idea to involve other people, which you could also do when you work as a lone wolf, at some point of the process. As always, Jarred Spool’s presentation was entertaining and interactive. He just knows how to get his audience involved and up on heir feet. He stated (among other things), that “it’s time to retire the dogam of user centered design” and that “we should focus on informed design and the three core ux attributes,” he found in his reserach: vision, feedback and culture. At the CSS 3 panel, the representatives of the different browsers (except for Apple, who were absent as usual) showed the level of CSS implementation. If what they said is true, while Opera and Mozilla have, as we know, already started implementing CSS 3 features, IE8 will be the first browser with complete CSS 2.1 support. Can’t wait to verify this. The links to the slides of this presentation will be posted on molly.com can be found on Molly’s website. [...]

  5. masumlar says:

    I didn’t know about word-wrap: break-word;

    How nerdy is it that I’m ultra excited for it when it hasn’t ever really been an issue so far?

  6. prisca says:

    Molly,

    thanks for those – will be great to have a look :)

  7. thank you ver much molly, very nice

  8. [...] molly.com » CSS3 Panel Slides from SXSWi These are the CSS3 panel slides from SXSW Interactive. As the moderator, I apologize to the 40 people who could not get into the room. It was a really informative and fun panel, so we’ve made these slides available to the public at large to extend that information. (tags: http://www.molly.com 2009 mes2 dia20 css3 apresentação presentation SXSW *****) [...]

  9. Marco Carag says:

    Molly, thanks for this… I saw these slides at the panel in Austin, and enjoyed it very much.

    One question — what version of Opera needs to be run to see the latest CSS implementations? I’m in Opera/10.00 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X; U; Edition Turbo; en) Presto/2.2.0, and much of the fun stuff I saw “Howcome” demo aren’t showing right (@font-face, transitions).

    Thanks again, Molly!

    • Chris M says:

      I’m also having trouble replicating the slides from Hakon. I really enjoyed the presentation, but my copy of Opera (Win XP, 10 alpha, build 1345) is having trouble with lots of things. Any ideas? Thanks.

  10. Rachel Sooy says:

    Thank you Molly.
    It was an awesome panel to attend.

  11. Remy Sharp says:

    Hi Molly – great to meet you at SXSW.

    Regarding the slides – has anyone brought up as to why Håkon’s slides are missing the last CSS3 demos (not the transitions – the SVG filters)?

    When I saw them they seemed like the most exciting part of the demos, being able to run a source through a Gaussian blur or saturate the colour – very interesting indeed.

    Perhaps you could prod him to add the slides back in, even if we can’t see them working yet, at least we’ll see the syntax being used.

    Cheers!

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