Looks good on Safari and validates in the W3C validator. Not a
validation issue but more contrast between some or your text and
background colours will improve accessibility.
Cheers
Kyle
On 2004 Jul 16, , at 14:26, Richard Lake wrote:
Could you critique http://www.pricklypair.co.nz for me
on a link on that
menu,
the bullets flash off and on real quick -- is that intentional?
ByteDreams
- Original Message -
From: Kyle Barrow [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, July 09, 2004 3:08 AM
Subject: Re: [WSG] Does anybody know an expandable vertical css/js menu
For mobiles, emulators help reduce our development cost with reduced
packet costs but we still need to test on as many real mobiles we can
get you hands on.
Are you targeting a specific PDA OS?
Kyle
On 2004 Jul 02, , at 19:07, Charles Roper wrote:
Or perhaps a simulator isn't the best solution?
WML is dead. XHTML (Basic or MP) is the future and the format pushed in
WAP 2.
My personal site at http://pukupi.com has mobile Web gear that may be
able to help. As Siemens mobiles use Openwave's browser, you should
also check out the Openwave Developer Network at
Once user agent if...else or switch statements enter your code, you
begin the walk down the slippery slope to code obsolescence, especially
with mobiles.
Kyle
On 2004 Jun 25, , at 17:35, Mordechai Peller wrote:
There are plenty of reasons to do so server side, log files being the
most common.
OMTP is a new standards body attempting to promote open standards
amongst mobile manufacturers.
With the messy state of Web standards compliance on mobiles, an
organisation like this is long overdue although I noticed NTT DoCoMo is
a member which is rather like inviting Hannibal Lector for
It would be great if WASP took a greater interest in mobile Web
standards but that is not happening right now. OMTP goes beyond Web
standards encompassing all mobile technologies.
Kyle
On 2004 Jun 24, , at 20:43, Andy Budd wrote:
Interesting Idea, but isn't this something the web standards