With the proper file formats in place, Adobe's new player will play native web video in all the newest browsers, and will switch to Flash playback mode for all your poor visitors stuck with IE6 or something equally Stone-Aged. So developers posting HTML5 video still need to encode their files in at least two of the three major formats - the widely-used H.264, the newer WebM or the older Ogg Theora - to guarantee all HTML5 capable browsers will be able to see their videos. But it's still a bit of a mess, with different browsers supporting different formats. ![]() ![]() HTML5 video adoption among browsers has gone tremendously so far - Chrome, Firefox, Safari and Opera all support native video, and baked-in support is coming to Internet Explorer 9 next year.
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