![]() ![]() Nonetheless, it's a pretty good advertisement for the promise of HTML5-and an even better advertisement for Google products and technologies. The same video could probably have been programmed in Adobe Systems' Flash format and worked in any browser, but it might have placed a greater load on my PC, (That's open to debate, and it depends on how the app is written and the precise specs of the machine running it). ![]() I'll hold off testing it on IE9 until Microsoft releases a full browser beta later in September-right now, the preview versions are only basic shells.) (I tested it on the beta of Firefox 4, and while it loaded more slowly and had a couple stutters, it worked. Firefox 3.x and IE8 don't have sufficient HTML5 support, though that's changing soon: IE9 and Firefox 4, both in initial beta-testing now, will offer dramatically improved support for the emerging Web standard. Unfortunately, the only release-level browser it works with is Chrome. In all, it was a pretty impressive display that ran well on my five-year-old Dell gaming laptop. Later, a window asked me to write a letter to my childhood self, and I was able to both type and draw letters that sprouted trippy tendrils of black while the music and other video windows played on. ![]() This freakishness is provided courtesy of Google Maps Street View and some clever manipulation of the images to keep them looking fluid, rather than a bunch of disconnected snapshots. The application opens and closes browser windows in time with the music, and about halfway through, one of them displayed the exact view from the front door of my childhood home. My first impression was a flashback of visiting shady Web sites back in the days before pop-up blockers existed: a cascade of no fewer than eight browser windows opened, and trying to close any one of them displayed a message warning that I'd exit the application altogether.īut once I gave up trying to control my screen, the experience was pretty amazing. After I followed the instructions to close other applications and enter my home address, the video took about 15 seconds to start. The official Google blog on Tuesday posted a link to an experimental music video for the Arcade Fire song "We Used To Wait" that shows off the capabilities of HTML5 with Google's Chrome browser. ![]()
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