Hi Rob,

Currently, the way the app is written means that it only displays as-
intended on the iPhone or iPod touch. The beta versions of Safari also
make a decent job of it but other browsers such as IE fail to render
the pages properly - resulting in what looks like a bit of a mess.

So for now, I prefer to serve those visitors up with an informative
message rather than what looks like a broken web app.

I do agree with you, though :o) which is why I'm looking at ways of
serving up 'standard' web pages viewable in any browser after I've
detected which browser/platform is being used.

Cheers!

RodC

On Oct 23, 3:35 am, RobG <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Oct 22, 6:20 am, RodThePlod <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Hello,
>
> > I've just added a detection script towww.iviewr.comwhichdetermines
> > if the user is accessing the site using an iPhone or iPod touch. If
> > they are, the proper pages are served up, else a nice message is
> > displayed explaining that the site cannot be accessed with the current
> > browser.
>
> Why do you limit your web application to maybe 0.01% of web surfers?
>
> --
> Rob


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