FWIW, my experience is that you won't get very far using media types for applying screen versus handheld styles anyway. Internet Explorer Mobile, for one, will load both screen and handheld media types, and a communication from a member of the Windows Mobile team told me that this was "by design". Other handheld browsers will load both because they were written by some jerk who didn't read the spec, and never realised what they were supposed to be doing.

I think the fact that a screen browser is rendering a handheld media type is the issue, no? Frankly, my job would end with a proper handheld style sheet. If someone was using a browser that didn't honor it, I wouldn't consider it my problem. I would be concerned about a screen browser that can't process the media type attribute correctly - even if it's a minor player like Safari.



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