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HTML 5 officially reached “candidate recommendation” status at the W3C last month, with the goal of hitting final publication in mid 2014. This means that HTML5 will be “feature frozen” by June 2014: most additions to the spec between now and then will appear as better documentation, improved test suites, and the ironing out of any inconsistencies.
While programmers concentrate on supporting the technological panoply of HTML5, various working groups have moved on to HTML 5.1. That new specification, currently scheduled for publication in 2016, incorporates many efforts that did not make the deadline for 5.0, including Web Workers, Storage, Sockets, improved accessibility, and adaptive development.
While programmers concentrate on supporting the technological panoply of HTML5, various working groups have moved on to HTML 5.1. That new specification, currently scheduled for publication in 2016, incorporates many efforts that did not make the deadline for 5.0, including Web Workers, Storage, Sockets, improved accessibility, and adaptive development.