Hi,

On Sun, Jun 29, 2014 at 1:33 AM, Florian Schmidt
<[email protected]> wrote:
> For me, that seems to be normal for desktop sites on mobile devices (that's 
> one of the plusses to use MobileFrontend :P). For example see the Nexus 7 
> Screenshots from Wikipedia and another website (on the other website you see 
> the difference between the "normal" font size (very little and blurry) and a 
> bigger font (better to read)). If you zoom the site in the browser, the font 
> is much clearer and bigger, so better to read, so on Android tablet, I think 
> on iPad, too.

Well, I don't think any of that is relevant here. It's not such an
unexpected use/edge case that we should ignore regressions or just
tell people they should be using MobileFrontend.

The user says it's a new problem. With a regression you can at least
do a binary search of the git commits and minimize a test case to
narrow down the cause. Unlike implementing a new feature or fixing a
bug that we might have always had. (or have had as long as the
corresponding feature existed)

> Normally the user will be automatically redirected to the Mobile optimized 
> site (MobileFrontend) with an iPad, so, if he want to see the desktop site, 
> he must opt-out with the link at the bottom.

Only since we started redirecting tablets too. (in the last ~2 weeks)

-Jeremy

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