So are all other browser developers having problems with this, or is it being exaggerated?
They also fund the Participatory Culture Foundation, an open source video based browser developer.
These changes have caused headaches for browser developers and Web developers alike.
Some groups of browser developers support the Native Client technology, but others do not.
In contrast to the other browser developers, Microsoft's approach to standards support has been conservative.
W3C doesn't expect, or want, browser developers to wait for the final standard.
Many of Chrome's unique features had been previously announced by other browser developers, but Google was the first to implement and publicly release them.
Unlike meetings with other browser developers, this one had "a strange tension to it," he writes.
For browser developers, the situation is not quite so happy: browsers include H.264 decoders, and these are subject to royalties.
These properties and their corresponding attributes are documented quite well on the W3C site (which is what the browser developers use as a guide).