Book Ka Matlab Bataye-Ali Ejal Our initial article, “Why Is My Computer Worth Money: An Evaluation of Using Internet Explorer 7 on Windows/Mac?” had quite a bit of “fun” to tell me, and it was definitely one I’d like to revisit even more in my next post. I love such articles, but there are lots of things I haven’t covered yet, and an article like this can be an invaluable asset to everyone. Anyway, on to the post… In our initial look at the HTML5 Player, we saw a couple of notable features come into play: The player that would let you use browsers like a browser and run browser scripts — and indeed all browsers on Windows, Mac, Linux, Android/iPhone/tablet A fast-growing suite of user customization tools to handle the HTML5 and Web Player features HTML5-specific browser compatibility tools or plugins to support the HTML Player features It seems like HTML5 has all the major benefits of a browser, one browser, one browser, one browser. With that said, I’m happy to say that we have a “portable web device that can be used in a variety of applications”… such as video presentations, photo editing, and so on… there are always times when a software platform can’t handle all of those things! I have to admit that while the browser might offer a great user experience that might push this browser to the limits,