Posted: January 22nd, 2012, 10:00pm MST
Despite the lack of support from Internet Explorer 7/8 for most of the features included with HTML5, it's hard to ignore the hype that the standard has generated. Even though the migration process was at first somewhat slow, the number of websites that now use HTML5 as their backbone has grown at an exponential rate. There's a good reason for that: while it can't be considered an actual revolution, HTML5 is undeniably an evolution toward the creation of richer, cleaner and more semantic web pages. Nevertheless, the path to building cross-browser HTML5-based websites often calls for a delicat...