Should a Motorola E51 be able to use a stock standard wicket site with a bit of AJAX? Apparently its browser has javascript support (and it is enabled) but I can never get any parts of our wicket website that require AJAX to work on this phone.
Any idea why not? >-----Original Message----- >From: Martin Funk [mailto:[email protected]] >Sent: Wednesday, 16 June 2010 7:10 PM >To: [email protected] >Subject: Re: Wicket and mobile browsers > >Thank you for the hint, mobileaware wasn't on my radar so far. > >2010/6/15 Joachim F. Kainz <[email protected]> > >> Martin, >> >> WURFL is a great solution, but there are some problems with keeping it >> up-to-date for commercial applications. >> >> http://www.mobileaware.com/ is a good commercial vendor I have used for >> m.wellsfarg.com and other sites. They have an extensive >> device-repository and a lot of other useful features for building MWeb >> sites. Downside: $$$ >> >> Best regards, >> >> Joachim >> >> On Tue, 2010-06-15 at 17:36 +0200, Martin Funk wrote: >> >> > Hi Giovanni, >> > >> > on what basis do you do the device recognition and classification? >> > >> > Currently we are looking into wurfl http://wurfl.sourceforge.net/ >> > Any opion on tha? Or do you know of an alternative to wurfl? >> > >> > mf >> > >> > 2010/6/15 Joachim F. Kainz <[email protected]> >> > >> > > Giovanni, >> > > >> > > I am one of the developers of mobile.walmart.com. We are using Wicket >> to >> > > support all types of cell phones, but most of our traffic is from >smart >> > > phones. If you point to our site using iPhone, Blackberry, and >Motorola >> > > Razor you get three different experience. All three experiences are >> > > backed by the same Java code. >> > > >> > > We have nothing to do with visural wicket (even though at first >glance >> > > it looks interesting). Our opensource components are at >> > > http://code.google.com/p/jolira-tools/ >> > > >> > > Best regards, >> > > >> > > Joachim >> > > http://www.jolira.com >> > > >> > > On Sun, 2010-04-18 at 13:02 -0500, Jeremy Thomerson wrote: >> > > >> > > > There are many classes of smart phones available. Some support n >JS, >> > > some >> > > > very limited, while others support just about anything you can put >in >> a >> > > > regular browser. Because of this, you may use the same java code >> with >> > > three >> > > > or four different styles of markup so that each browser class has >its >> own >> > > > markup. >> > > > >> > > > Search the list for "mobile.walmart.com" and see the post made by >> the >> > > guys >> > > > that created that site. It talked about this. They also released >> some >> > > open >> > > > source components - visural wicket. >> > > > >> > > > -- >> > > > Jeremy Thomerson >> > > > http://www.wickettraining.com >> > > > >> > > > >> > > > >> > > > On Sun, Apr 18, 2010 at 3:17 AM, Giovanni <[email protected]> >> wrote: >> > > > >> > > > > I need to write a web application which will be accessed via >mobile >> > > > > browsers from smartphones. >> > > > > >> > > > > What are the smartphone browsers which work well with Wicket? >> > > > > >> > > > > What kind of attention should I pay during the development of >> Wicket >> > > > > applications for mobile devices? >> > > > > >> > > > > Is there any tutorial about developing Wicket applications for >> mobile >> > > > > target browsers? >> > > > > >> > > > > Thanks in advance for any help. >> > > > > >> > > > > giovanni >> > > > > >> > > > > >> > > > > >> > > > > >> > > >> --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected] For additional commands, e-mail: [email protected]
