- [lowvision.support](http://lowvision.support/) - Another website accessibility testing tool. This one lets you simulate different types of colourblindness and several other conditions right in your web browser. Strange url: yes, Bad tool: no (it wouldn't be featured here if it wasn't!).
- [High Resolution Browser Logos](https://github.com/alrra/browser-logos#high-resolution-browser-logos) - A GitHub repository that contains high resolution logos for every browser under the sun
- [abbr-touch](https://github.com/Tyriar/abbr-touch) - Make the `title` attribute of the `<abbr>` (abbreviation) HTML element accessible to touch screen users
- [Help users checkout faster with autofill](http://updates.html5rocks.com/2015/06/checkout-faster-with-Autofill) - A great article about using the `autocomplete` attribute to indicate what kind of content each input box should contain
## Polyfills
- [formfive](http://etiennetalbot.github.io/formFive/) - HTML5 form support for legacy browsers.
- [webfont-test](http://webfont-test.com/) - Compare up to 3 fonts at once
- [Google Fonts on Github](https://github.com/google/fonts) - A repository that contains the fonts available on [Google Fonts](https://www.google.com/fonts).
- [Noto](https://www.google.com/get/noto/) - A font that supports every single character in the Unicode character set. Every. single. one. If you can't find a font to display a specific character, use this. The whole thing weighs in at a staggering 472.6MB (!), although it's split up into different fonts for each language.
- [&what;](http://www.amp-what.com/) - Not strictly a font tool, but still useful. This website lets you search a considerably sized library of unicode characters and presents you with their HTML entity form.
- [Open Iconic](https://useiconic.com/open/) - An open source version of a much larger commerical icon set. Still good - has nice clear icons for use in many different projects.
- [NW.js](http://nwjs.io/) - Previously known as `node-webkit`, this tool lets you package your HTML / CSS / JS app into a bundle (native for your target desktop platform) with Blink & Node.JS.
- [Electron](http://electron.atom.io/) - An alternative to the above. Looks to be smaller, but I don't really know how it works.
- [HTML5 Semantic Element Flowchart](http://html5doctor.com/downloads/h5d-sectioning-flowchart.png) - Don't know which semantic HTML5 element to use? Use this flowchart to find out!
- [Feditor.IO](http://feditor.io/) - Another online HTML / CSS / JS playground. Doesn't have a save function from what I can see, but apart from that it looks quite good.
This section is a bit different - it contains link to sites that you might want to link to if a user of your website doesn't support a technology that you require.
- [enable-javascript.com](http://enable-javascript.com/) - Shows the user how to enable javascript in their browser
- [What Browser?](https://whatbrowser.org/) - Useful to link to if a user has an outdated browser
- [SRI Hash Generator](https://srihash.org/) - Compute the SRI hash for the resource at a given url. See [cloudflare's blog post](https://blog.cloudflare.com/an-introduction-to-javascript-based-ddos/) (Scroll to the section on "Subresource Integrity") for more information.