Once I saw a Nokia trying to serve a wide (media=screen) CSS, I
solved it using a media=handheld stylesheet, almost empty. It would be
a problem if these little devices are trying to load the 'screen'
sheet, do you have handheld specific defined sheets in your code?
Sorry to ask, but if it
On 2 Mar 2007, at 14:15:31, TuteC wrote:
Once I saw a Nokia trying to serve a wide (media=screen) CSS, I
solved it using a media=handheld stylesheet, almost empty. It would be
a problem if these little devices are trying to load the 'screen'
sheet, do you have handheld specific defined sheets
Will major search engines for phones take any notice of javascript?
Google
http://www.google.com/xhtml/
Ask
http://m.ask.com/
They ignore stylesheets even if you make one for small screens!
They strip the page headers of meta tags, linked javascript gone is my
guess?
Should we give up making
Tim wrote:
My meta tag base href were taken out of pages by ask.com the mobile
version http://m.ask.com/
This allowed them to run my site by relative URLs on their server with
fake paypal links en all.
Jesus, that's horrible!
Excuse my ignorance. It seems then, that all the best
They know better I recokon (Aust drawl accent LOL)
All we have to do is validate and accesibilitise :-)
No, sorry Barney for the pun, I hate the reality I want to make mobile
phone stylesheets that will be observed.
Javascript and anything else as the Guttenberg designer said to the
Pope
Tim
On 1/03/2007, at 10:25 PM, Lee Powell wrote:
Does anyone have any advice on how I can check if the device
accessing the page is handheld or screen and offer up the relevant
javascript?
Best bet - create a mobile specific domain... failing that you could
test for an arbitrary property:
Barney Carroll wrote:
Excuse my ignorance. It seems then, that all the best opportunities
for designers to optimise for small devices and screen readers are
being usurped by the developers.
Do they really know better?
In most cases, sadly they do. The vast majority of sites can't be viewed
This should not happen with Opera browsers (Opera Mini and Opera
Mobile). We specifically ask Google and other search engines not to
give us transcoded results when our users search using their search
engines. If they do then it is a bug and we want to know about it so
we can ask them to
David Storey wrote:
For styling the page handheld stylesheets should be used. For
JavaScript issues I don't know of a way to specifically detect if it is
a handheld, and browser sniffing is far from ideal on mobile due to many
reasons.
Could you give an element a specific style in the
Hi David,
In my experience, you can't guarantee that a mobile device will be a full
fledged 'browser' (like Opera mini or Safari for the iPhone), so you don't know
if JS will be supported on a handheld device. This may be less likely now, but
is still valid.
Example: About 3 - 4 years ago I
Search Engines don't read JavaScript but the question wasn't about
search.
Lots of mobile devices think that they are actually screen browsers so this
may be causing some problems - My phone (Nokia N73) has 2 browsers; one that
reads handheld sheets and one that reads screen sheets.
Can I
No idea if it would execute in whatever handheld browser is needed, and my
brief research indicates this style grabbing in javascript is a bit flaky
cross browser even on the desktop, but you might be able to hack something
together that works a lot of the time.
flaky would be an
FYI, apologies, if it this has already been posted here,
From: Dominique Hazael-Massieux [EMAIL PROTECTED]
(sorry for cross-posting, please follow-up on [EMAIL PROTECTED])
Hello Mobile Web Fans,
The recently chartered Mobile Web Test Suites Working Group [1] is
seeking public feedback on one
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