This is where solutions like MIT's (m.mit.edu) shine so well. By presenting a tiered design that replicates basic functionality across a range of phones in the format that fits each phone best. -Drew On Sep 17, 2009, at 1:50 PM, Sara Hurley wrote: > That's something I actually want to talk about sometime - one thing > I've been concerned with as we do a redesign at SPH (getting us all > on the same page, technology and design-wise) is that phones have > such a range of support for how web pages are navigated and what > they do, and from what I've tried on my corner of SPH in the past > has looked good in some simple browsers (like on my truly awful > phone), but is way too simple for an iPhone interface - and the > mobile stylesheet in whatever form it exists in becomes the style > sheet even for phones, like the iPhone, that do a great job of > letting people browse the web as it exists for desktops. > > Does this make any sense? It's something I've been struggling with > in my head - what the optimal compromise is for those style sheets. > > S > > Zachary Johnson wrote: >> If we're going to have a group meeting themed around Mobile Web I'd >> be happy to go over some of my notes on making websites mobile >> friendly through source code ordering that I talked about a bit two >> years ago at MinneWebcon. >> >> Zach > > -- > -- > > Sara Hurley, MFA > 612-625-7709 > > Web Coordinator > http://cpheo.sph.umn.edu > Digital Learning Group (DLG) > School of Public Health > University of Minnesota