
After far too long procrastinating (actually I’ve been quite busy) I’ve finally posted a new experiment over on HTML5 Laboratory.
Focusing on the cache manifest file and how to set your application up to be available offline, I hope you find using the cache manifest file informative.
As usual, feel free to comment on the experiment itself, or leave a comment here.

My latest blog entry over at PC Pro is up. As the name suggests, adding audio to your website with HTML5 describes, in the simplest way, how to add embedded audio files to your website using HTML5.
There are more advanced techniques with JavaScript that give you access to the audio API, but I intend to cover that in a future blog post, and the same goes for video.

I have now registered to begin my first ever course with the Open University. As of the 2nd of October I will once again be a student when I begin AA100 – The arts past and present.
The intention is for this to eventually lead to a BA (Honours) in History, although that’s a fair distance away but I have to start somewhere!
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If you’ve been following me on Twitter, you may have noticed me mention that I was working on a chat feature for a website run by the World Land Trust. This project has been ongoing for a while and has only recently gone live.
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As the first of the HTML5 books to come out, and the first book to be released by A Book Apart, the eagerly awaited HTML5 For Web Designers by Jeremy Keith is a very easy read.
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My latest blog post over on PC Pro is up. Seven of the best HTML5 resources where I list my recommended online resources for getting started with, or learning more about, HTML5.
As usual, feel free to let me know what you think, either in this blog or over at PC Pro.