3 | | Multiple mobile devices (and now even some quasi-Desktop devices) are shipping WebKit based browsers with features that are not in the WebKit tree. Some of these features are web facing. Some of these features are hacks. |
| 3 | Multiple mobile devices (and now even some quasi-Desktop/quasi-Mobile devices) are shipping WebKit based browsers with features that are not in the WebKit tree. Some of these features are web facing. Some of these features are hacks. Some of these features are in the process of being landed. The questions I'd like to talk about for this discussion are: |
| 4 | |
| 5 | * Which of these features should we as a project encourage? |
| 6 | * Which of these features should we as a project discourage? |
| 7 | * Which of these features are in the tree and which are not? |
| 8 | * Which ones *should* be in the tree? |
| 9 | * Of the web facing features, which should we begin pushing up to the standards organizations? |
| 10 | |