html5 support has improved a lot between 2.40 and current 2.46 which
hopefully arrives soon. SeaMonkey should support all standard html5
features Firefox support so any current website which supports Firefox
should work in SeaMonkey. Just make sure to cut back on the Javascript
and try to avoid using too much external content.
I wouldn't worry too much about html5 and more about the actual design.
A lot of new mobile optimized websites make me want to barf when viewing
them with a PC or laptop.
FRG
Richard Owlett wrote:
On 9/28/2016 10:30 AM, WaltS48 wrote:
On 9/27/2016 2:10 PM, Richard Owlett wrote:
That's an imperfect subject line to say the least.
Does SeaMonkey have a specification more detailed than the
"Feature
List" at http://www.seamonkey-project.org/doc/features ?
The "World Wide Web Consortium" has test suites
[http://validator.w3.org/] to demonstrate compliance of a WEB
page with
various HTML standards.
My interest is from a different perspective. What features of
HTML4
and/or HTML% an SeaMonkey handle as page designer intended?
Background: Our Pastor wishes the church to have a WEB presence -
including the availability of sermons. I date from dial-up era
when much
audio was "download then play". Streaming was available in
theory - my
ISP could not keep up with it.
I understand that HTML5 has an "audio tag". In reality, what
does that
mean?
What questions should I &/or Pastor be asking?
Comments?
*CAUTION* -- I date from era of *HIGH* speed PAPER tape ;/
Are you going to be creating this web presence and do you plan to
use SeaMonkey Composer to create the site?
Actually niether. The church was given a quotation for creation and
hosting of the site. They had looked at a "design your own website with
'free' hosting". The fine print bothered me so I got involved.
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