Adobe Adds HTML5 To Dreamweaver As An Afterthought

If you’re a web designer, web user or a human being who’s touched a computer in the last year, you probably know that HTML5 is kind of a big deal.
Well, nobody told Adobe that. Having just shipped Adobe Creative Suite 5 you’d expect the world’s leading creativity software maker to be up on all these new fangled web technologies.
Actually, Dreamweaver, the Creative Suite’s HTML authoring tool has very little in the way of support, but Adobe has realized this and has released the Adobe HTML5 Pack as an extension.
The extension contains several useful tools for web designers, including code hinting for HTML5 and CSS3, WebKit engine updates and support for the new video and audio tags. Adobe has also bundled sample and starter layouts to help designers get started quickly with HTML5.
Source: Adobe Press
In the bottom line, Concept is the excellent application for web progression within primarily Enthusiasm atmosphere, while Dreamweaver’s excellent assistance and mobility creates it better for web progression on most other types.
I agree with keith and rick. Html5 is not projected to be finished until when? Isn’t it 2024 or something? (May or may not be right I don’t remember the exact date but its far in the future). CSS3 currentlly has such a diverse way of being rendered by each browser – its far from ready. Plenty, if not most web developers will still be coding with (x)html because that’s what currently works for all browsers, and if html5 is finalized, xhtml will still work just fine.
First of all, Adobe didn’t include it off the bat because support for HTML5 features is so spotty across browsers.
Second, there are a lot of folks not using HTML5 tags or CSS3 elements, nor will be for a long time, so they don’t need the code hinting or the display support.
So you can install it if you want to get your hands dirty, or you can wait until the spec is a little more mature. And it is free.
Adobe also rolled in support for media queries and multiscreen views, so it is sort of an update as well. Of course, media queries don’t work in IE, so not everyone will be able to use this feature. The majority of web users are still using some form of IE, so a lot of HTML5 elements just don’t apply. If the budget for a project allows for it, progressive enhancement can be implemented, but this is another huge issue with HTML5, going back to spotty browser support.
Thanks for pointing this one out!