• Home Blog November 2025 Baseline monthly digestStay organized with collectionsSave and categorize content based on your preferences. • Jeremy WagnerGitHubLinkedInHomepagePublished: December 9, 2025 Published: December 9, 2025 While everything tends to slow down as the year begins to wrap up, there’s still plenty of Baseline news in this edition of this monthly digest to cover, so let’s get started. • Next.js adopts currentbaseline widely availablebrowsers Next.jsis a widely-used React framework It carries considerable influence not just in how developers might choose to develop for the web, but also the browsers developers might choose to developfor. • Recently,Next.js updated its default browser support criteriato a current evaluation of thebaseline widely availableBrowserslist query. • As time goes on, Next.js instances that update to include this change stand to benefit from fewer polyfills and transforms, and a larger number of web features that developers will be able to use safely in their applications. • Baseline in action Baseline in actionis a series of articles with accompanying demos that show you how to use a mix of Baseline web features to build common user interface elements.
Article Summaries:
- November 2025 Baseline Monthly Digest - Summary
The digest reports that Next.js has updated its default browser support to the current “baseline widely available” Browserslist query, enabling developers to use more native web features with fewer polyfills. Baseline’s “in action” series launches with demos on container queries, image galleries, and popovers, with more content planned for 2026. Two new case studies-Cybozu and Target.com-illustrate how teams redefined browser support using Baseline. November also added several features to the baseline list, including color(), color-mix(), compression streams, Lab/LCH, oklab/oklch, and WebRTC SCTP information.
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