Apple has always handpicked what they say on Safari release notes; WebKit has done the same on their blog announcements. Many iOS-only changes are just magical: changes are made but no one talks about them, document them or even update old docs. I have plenty of examples of that
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One of the most prominent examples of this is Web App Manifest marked as "In development" for 1-2 years when it was actually Partially implemented. Is there any mention anywhere about which parts are implemented? No. And it has a clear impact on UX on web apps using the manifestpic.twitter.com/A3v1xBFP6t
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To be fair, Apple has release notes for Safari releases (e.g. https://developer.apple.com/documentation/safari_release_notes/safari_13_release_notes …) and
@WebKit Technology Preview releases (e.g. https://webkit.org/blog/9600/release-notes-for-safari-technology-preview-93/ …). The#FronteersConf talk seems to be based on https://www.raymondcamden.com/2018/06/07/keeping-up-with-browser-updates ….@jonathandavis, people seem to struggle to find it. -
Yep, I mentioned the release notes. And that blog post is me, so yep, it was based on it. :)
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& Web Standards TL; Blink API OWNER
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