Hi David from Opera,

Quote you:
I'm a member of that WG but honestly it is complete useless and out of date. It 
was commissioned when 12kb all together was a big deal.

>From the Mobile Web Best Practices course class I got an impression the 
>mobileOK Checker is an improved version (v1.4.1) but I have no prior 
>experience to compare it. 

I am working on  a mobile version WordPress site that I have not done content 
negotiation yet, but display none the content including inline images that I 
don't want them show up in mobile version. The homepage is a little heavy due 
to a large image (display none already), both mobileOK Checker and mobiReady 
test showed the page is over 80K and picked up all inline images. Is there a 
way to find out exactly how many kilobyte Opera Mini loaded the page since you 
said it doesn't load anything sets to display none.


You mentioned Dragonfly, I do use this tool when I check site in Opera, but it 
will not be a tool that can be replaced by FF Web Developer tool for most 
developers who live and breath by FF and the extension I believe (the UI is 
more intuitive and easier to navigate for layout troubleshoot  or  to find what 
classes/ID are in a block etc. ), and I do not see Dragonfly for Opera Mini and 
Opera Mobile. I searched for it few months ago.


Another thing, Opera Mini does not load the font family (along with many other 
elements) but the default Sans-serif, however it's able to pick up some CSS3 
elements (one that I see is text-shadow). Is this a device restriction 
preventing Opera Mini from doing this? I have a doubt because iPod (I think 
iPhone too but I don't have one to check) is capable of loading both default 
Sans and Sans-serif.


Thanks!

tee

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