Dave Hyatt

Dave Hyatt
Occupation software developer
Known for development on Mozilla, Safari and WebKit
creating Camino
co-creating Mozilla Firefox

Dave Hyatt (June 28, 1972) is an American Software Engineer employed by Apple Inc. (since July 15, 2002), where he is part of the development team responsible for the Safari web browser and WebKit framework. Hyatt was part of the original team that shipped the beta releases and 1.0 release of Safari. He is the Safari and WebKit Architect.

Before Apple, Hyatt worked at Netscape Communications from 1997 to 2002 where he contributed to the Mozilla web browser. While at Netscape, he also created Camino (then known as Chimera) and co-created Firefox (originally called Phoenix) with Blake Ross. He is credited with the implementations of tabbed browsing for Chimera and Firefox (the initial implementation for Netscape/Mozilla browsers, on which Hyatt based his work was created by HJ van Rantwijk, as part of his MultiZilla project at multizilla.mozdev.org).

Hyatt also created and wrote the first specifications for the XBL and XUL markup languages.

Hyatt studied as an undergraduate at Rice University and graduate at University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

Hyatt developed, but no longer maintains, the software for Shadowland Six in his spare time; a forum and discussion server for the Shadowrun community. He also co-wrote published material for Shadowrun as a freelance writer, including the books Renraku Arcology: Shutdown and Brainscan.

He is also an active member of the W3C's CSS Working Group. He was an editor of the HTML5 draft specification up through March 2010, at which time he resigned to concentrate on other endeavors.[1]

References

  1. Stachowiak, Maciej (3 April 2010). "Dave Hyatt has resigned as editor". W3C HTML Working Group (Mailing list). Retrieved 13 April 2010.

External links

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