Thx Jake,

Actually I thought it'd be need for the initial load (I'm coding
without an iPhone so sorta flying blind)

But my bigger problem now is that the yule log gif file isn't
animating on most devices (wierd since its worked everywhere else)...
oh well

On Nov 25, 2:42 pm, Jake Wolpert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> it tilts , but the ads make it ridiculous!
>
> <script type="application/x-javascript">
>      addEventListener("load", function()
>      {
>          setTimeout(hideURLbar, 0);
>      }, false);
>      function hideURLbar()
>      {
>          window.scrollTo(0, 1);
>      }
> </script>
>
> isn't needed  because the other script does it all.
>
> On Nov 25, 2007, at 11:27 AM, AwayBBL wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> > Can someone please try this...
>
> >http://www.myhip.com/yule.html
>
> > If it works correctly, when you tilt to another orientation, it should
> > show a different image.
>
> > the code is this... borrowed some of the comments from above...if you
> > see any erros, please let me know
> > (I'm currently without device so I can't see if it works)
>
> > <head>
> >   <meta name="viewport" content="width=320; initial-scale=1.0;
> > maximum-scale=1.0; user-scalable=0;"/>
> > <script type="application/x-javascript">
> >    addEventListener("load", function()
> >    {
> >        setTimeout(hideURLbar, 0);
> >    }, false);
> >    function hideURLbar()
> >    {
> >        window.scrollTo(0, 1);
> >    }
> > </script>
> > <script type="application/x-javascript">
> >   window.onload = window.onorientationchange = function()
> >       {
> >       setTimeout(scrollTo, 0, 0, 1);
> >       if ( window.orientation == 90 || window.orientation == -90 )
> >            {
> >            document.getElementById('main').innerHTML = "<img
> > src=yule.gif>";
> >            }
> >       else
> >            {
> >            document.getElementById('main').innerHTML = "<img
> > src=wreath.gif><br>Tilt for Yule Log";
> >            }
> >       }
> > </script>
> > </head>
> > <body style="PADDING-RIGHT: 0px; PADDING-LEFT: 0px; PADDING-BOTTOM:
> > 0px; MARGIN: 0px auto; PADDING-TOP: 0px; BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffffff"
> > border=0 bgcolor="#FFFFFF"  text="#808080">
> > <table align=center width=100% height=100% cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0
> > bgcolor=black>
> >  <tr align=center>
> >    <td align=center><div id="main"><img src="wreath.gif"><br>Tilt for
> > Yule Log</div></td>
> >  </tr>
> > </table>
>
> > On Nov 23, 7:02 pm, Randy Walker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >> Some of the built in apps are portrait only.
> >> Even so, I agree letting the user decide is probably the most  
> >> friendly
> >> thing.  Personally, I don't like most sites in landscape.
> >> -=Randy
>
> >> On 11/21/07 7:29 PM, "RobG" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> >>> On Nov 21, 6:26 am, Jake Wolpert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >>>> the problem with the alert, is when you flip back and forth you  
> >>>> queue
> >>>> up alerts,
>
> >>>> a special background image on the html tag  would not queue  
> >>>> anything
>
> >>> The best solution is that suggested by August: let the user decide
> >>> whether to use the page in landscape or portrait.  Any attempt to
> >>> force the user to use a particular orientation is a very unfriendly
> >>> thing to do.  :-(
>
> >>> If Apple thought forcing an orientation was a good idea, they  
> >>> wouldn't
> >>> have made the orientation property read-only.
>
> >>> --
> >>> Rob- Hide quoted text -
>
> >> - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
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