The real coup is that this is what they were working on a year ago, and a much more advanced version (with 3D transforms!) has been documented and on millions of iPhones for 8 months now.
I wonder how much of this is in direct response to Adobe's influence on web animation via Flash and if CSS Effects has in some way influenced Apple's decision to avoid putting Flash on the iPhone (beyond some of the current technical issues). Clearly CSS Effects has a long way to go before it matches the capabilities of Flash and it will be interesting to see how the Microsoft, Mozilla and the standards bodies respond.
Regardless, this is a very interesting development and it will be nice to have some open choices in web animation. Now hopefully we don't start seeing thousands of websites with falling leaves and bouncing boxes.
Like one of the commenters to the original article points out: why the heck does running such a simple animation takes up 92% of my CPU capacity on my MacBook?
The initiative is very nice indeed, but this needs a lot of work.
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[ 0.22 ms ] story [ 21.6 ms ] threadhttps://developer.apple.com/webapps/docs/samplecode/
Regardless, this is a very interesting development and it will be nice to have some open choices in web animation. Now hopefully we don't start seeing thousands of websites with falling leaves and bouncing boxes.
The initiative is very nice indeed, but this needs a lot of work.
http://www.satine.org/archives/2008/11/06/coverflow-for-safa...