![]() ![]() IE9 adds some cool features, some of which play catch up to other browsers (searching via the URL bar, tear-off tabs) and others that are new, (built-in developer tools including debugging, Windows 7-like jump lists).Įxpect Microsoft to bang its drum that IE9 preserves users' privacy better than the rest. And from a developer's point of view, no royalties is the ideal situation. But Google is trying to use its might to shun use of it, in favor of its own, albeit donated, technology. The H.264 codec is light, fast, polished and well-supported, even by Apple. Mind you, such royalties would be covered by RAND (Reasonable and Nondiscriminatory Royalties), so they would be a uniform low-cost and use of H.264 could not be denied to any vendor. H.264 is, in contrast, owned by the MPEG-LA consortium and although it doesn’t charge royalties for its use today, it reportedly plans to start doing so in 2015. Reminds me of the earlier iterations of Firefox 3, which was a pretty miserable experience. Chrome 9 was updated on my Windows 7 PC this week and it was nice to play with Google's WebGL experimental sites to see it in action. Aside: Chrome pushes out its latest stable release to all users automatically. ![]()
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