8 July 2008

Opera Web Standards Curriculum

design news

Opera Web Standards Curriculum: Learn to build a better Web with OperaOpera, one of the major alternative Web browsers to Windows’ Internet Explorer, has opened the door to a new user market with the publication of its Opera Web Standards Curriculum. This curriculum is a complete course that teaches standards-based Web development, including HTML, CSS, design principles and background theory, and JavaScript basics. It already has support from many organizations (including Yahoo! and the Web Standards Project) and universities. The first 23 articles are currently available, with about 30 more to be published between now and late September.

The Web Standards Curriculum is completely free to use, accessible, and assumes no previous knowledge. Some of the authors you’ll meet include Jonathan Lane (President of Industry Interactive, a Web development/application development company located on Mayne Island, British Columbia, Canada), Mark Norman Francis (Currently a Front End Architect for Yahoo!, defining best practices, coding standards and quality in Web development internationally), Christian Heilmann (A trainer and lead developer for Yahoo! in the UK who oversees front end code quality for Europe and Asia) and your own Linda Goin. Yes, moi.

This incredibly complex project was pulled together and edited by Chris Mills, developer relations manager for Opera. Chris edits and publishes articles on dev.opera.com and labs.opera.com, liaises with the community to raise awareness of Opera and collect feedback, and evangelizes about Opera software wherever he can. It was a pure pleasure to work with Chris, who has nothing up his sleeve other than to spread the goodness of the Web wherever possible through usable and accessible Web sites. So what are you waiting for? Go visit!

2 Feedbacks on "Opera Web Standards Curriculum"

Adam

As a designer, not many things tickle my fancy as much as when browsers are motivated to spread the practice of web standards. We have so many people fighting for the cause, yet IE has to constantly screw things up for us. I’ve long been a fan of Opera and this is just icing on the cake. Down with IE! I long for the day I don’t have to debug in IE anymore.

no. 2 pencil

Chris Mills did a bang-up job of bringing this idea to Opera and pulling together the authors. He also spent countless hours with editing and refining the project. But, you’re correct - IE wouldn’t do something like this…Opera truly is an unsung browser, and hopefully that will change in the near future.

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