On Jul 5, 2005, at 1:38 PM, Kalle Vahlman wrote:

On 7/5/05, Timo Steuerwald <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:


I'd rather say they are comfortably big targets to poke at, but I
guess that's more a question of preference than a hard number...

On the PalmOS the targets are much smaller and there are few complaints about the interface elements being too small. In fact many people bought the Sony devices simply because the high resolution of the screen reduced the apparent size of the interface elements, ie. fonts, buttons, etc.

Hope you have a steady hand too.

I guess if palsy patients are included in the target demographic...

Furthermore I don't know if it is userfriendly to browse a
website in full screen mode and then for navigating switch to common
screen mode and after this back to full screen mode and the again to
common screen mode...

Mostly one can "navigate" with links on the web site (on good sites at
least :), but since the fullscreen can be toggled with one click of
the fullscreen key, I wouldn't see it as a major issue (when compared
to the additional screen estate you get).

But what happens when a user wants to go enter a new URL? Do they have to turn on Normal View mode to enter their address with the included keyboard or HWR? It can be a major issue. I don't mean to step on toes here, but the fewer clicks, taps, etc. the better.

- Because internet sites are optimated on desktop
resolutions, the difference between these two modes can be still big in this area. In some cases between "website useable" and "website unusable".

Websites are unusable for far more annoying reasons than simple
resolution optimation. Incompetent web designers are hardly something
that can be considered when designing an UI. If a website is broken in
720 pixels, it will be that in 760 or 780 pixels too.

But many web designers have standardized on screen sizes of 800x600 which leaves about 750-770px of usable space. When the Nokia 770 displays a webpage at 692px wide, you must still scroll horizontally to see all the content on a page. Vertical scrolling is perfectly acceptable, horizontal scrolling is not. Since the 770 has the ability to display all 750-770px of the window, and you must hit a button to go to full screen, you ask the user to do more work that might otherwise be avoided.

Has anyone ever had to hit the "full screen" button on their desktop monitors to properly view a webpage? I realize that there are certain limitations in surfing the web on other handhelds, but none have included screens of this size. I just feel that the screen can be better used in a slightly different configuration than what has been shown so far.


n+

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