I think it's worth noting that there is a lot of commonality between
accessibility and mobile optimisation. When the W3C Mobile Web Best
Practices Group began its work (way back in June 2005 - I'm feeling old)
our starting point was WCAG. They're not the same, of course, but the
ways of thinkin
Hi Grant
I think Sheldon and Andrew both are right. You have to check your user and
content of the site.
Here is the best example of the site which look nicely in different devices.
http://www.kingshillcars.com/
You have to study your site material how you want to show the site.
Rega
yep, plenty of division ;-)
...but while Sheldon is correct that responsive design can cater quite
well to the most popular mobile devices, there are still a heap out
there that don't recognise media queries or any of the other building
blocks of responsive design. In some parts of the world these
UNOFFICIAL
Hi Grant,
My thoughts on this are (assuming you're rebuilding an existing site):
Check your site statistics/analytics - look at the range of devices accessing
the site and what they're looking at - are there some pieces of content which
aren't being accessed from handheld devices? If
Grant, I think it's likely that you'll find a lot of division on this question.
But I'll go ahead and offer my own opinion.
I think it's an unnecessary expense and expenditure of energy to build a
redundant site simply to suit mobile devices. There is a very workable solution
using HTML5+CSS3,