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Matthew Tam

HTML5 Drops the Time Element | Webmonkey | Wired.com - 0 views

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    HTML 5 drops the proposed element which means that there will be no semantically meaningful way to specify publication dates in HTML5. "Hickson claims that the element wasn't being used for two of its primary use cases, namely easier CSS styling and to indicate publication dates for web documents." 
Adrian Galope

The HTML5 Time Element Is Back and Better Than Ever | Webmonkey | Wired.com - 1 views

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    This article talks about HTML5. The HTML5 time element disappeared last year because HTML5 editor lan Hickson deleted it from the specification but the W3C,the group that oversees HTML5, added it back. The W3C didn't just add time back but they also improve it considerably. This article is related to our course because it is all about HTML that we are studying.
jjc_34

Titanfall, the game that will ruin all other shooters and win over customers for the Xb... - 0 views

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    The Titan has landed. Titanfall is finally here and it is winning people towards the XBox One. Titanfall has lived up to the hype and is one of the greatest games to land on the market. Titanfall combines game elements from across genres into a near perfect game.
Winnie Huang

China: The electronic wastebasket of the world - CNN.com - 1 views

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    When people decide they have no use for old technology and do not think twice before throwing it out, they probably do not realize that their outdated piece of hardware finds its grave half way across the world. Possibly even in Guiyu, China where the largest electronic waste or "E-waste" dump site exists. People are oblivious to the fact that this is a recurring problem, not just a small matter of sorting and recycling through a few pieces of plastic, metal and wires. This black hole of scrapped computers, television sets, air conditioners and even refrigerators is toxic towards the environment, and is contaminating the growth of crops all around the area, such as rice, from the gases of the poisonous elements contained within the gadgets to make them work. The consuming pile of E-waste is not just environmentally deadly but also causes health hazards, along with the expensive and dangerous recycling operations that are needed. If people continue to neglect this issue, E-waste will continue to grow, swallow the earth with a blanket of harmful bi-products and affect everyone's lives, which is something we do not want. E-waste is hazardous and will eventually kill the planet with the path that it seems to be following without any real rise against the issue. This is such a nice way to give back to the environment don't you think? Polluting the earth and by proxy ourselves with technological garbage is obviously a smart thing to do, as if we aren't destroying the world enough already.
anonymous

Mozilla Shows Off Firefox for Tablets - 1 views

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    Mozilla is testing a computer tablet that runs Firefox. This tablet is slightly bigger that the ones that are out right now, but it helps bring elements to the screen, such as tabs, for example. This tablet might be ideal to people who are used to the computer layout and bigger screens and menu bars at the top o f the internet screen.
Talia DiPoce

4 Ways Steve Jobs and Apple Changed the Music Industry - 0 views

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    It's hard to imagine life without the iPod today. Although it wasn't the first portable MP3 player released, the iPod extracted the best elements from its early competitors, and morphed them into a product that defined portable technology and changed the way listeners experience music.
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