# SVG in Internet Explorer
# Cross-browser XUL
# Standard technologies
# Natural development
# Better performance
# Extensible architecture
# All web-browsers supported
I've been using Sketch properly for about a month now and I have to say that I'm really impressed as are a lot of others now using it in the design community.
I first found out about it after reading a blog post by Meng To on How To Design Pixel Perfect Assets in which Meng refers to Sketch a few times and explains that it's great while designing for mobile as you can export in 2x even after designing in standard dimensions.
Sketch has had a lot of attention lately so here's a few blog posts and freebies that you may have missed:
Simple Vector iPhone Sketch Freebie
Browser
Wireframe iPhone
iOS 6 Template for Sketch
Raphaël is a small JavaScript library that should simplify your work with vector graphics on the web. In case you want to create your own specific chart or image crop-n-rotate widget, you can simply achieve it with this library.
A nice commecrial XML editor that not only has excellent validation, xslt and xpath and xquery, andformatting objects (fo) features, but supports an XML data grid view and XML Diff & Merge! It even supports generating SVG graphics via XSL transforms on data files, remote editing over FTP or WebDav, and is available as an Eclipse plugin. Only $48 for Academic use.
Amaya has been progressing nicely over the years and supports HTML, XHTML, MathML 2.0, SVG (even transparency and animation), and much of CSS 2 ... You can display and somewhat edit XML ... and there's some powerful tools for live editing...