« FUD: Web 2.0 in the Enterprise | Main | Thinking out Loud »

07/15/2007

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Christian Johansen

Oh, man. Am I in a time warp? I thought the browser wars were over, but now I find design practices to customize pages for the Safari browser in iPhone. The new syntax of the link tag (not the CSS, mind you) boggles the mind, and smells of browser sniffing. I have lots of experience sniffing browsers, and I can tell you it's a mad game to keep up with new browsers and customizing pages therefore. HeeheeheeheehaahaaaaaaWooop! (This comment best viewed with Safari browsers for iPhone updated after August 1, 2007)

Christian Johansen

Oh, man. Am I in a time warp? I thought the browser wars were over, but now I find new methods to customize pages for the Safari browser in iPhone. The new syntax of the link tag (only screen and ... is not standard - *gasp!) is very rigged, and smells of browser sniffing. I have lots of experience sniffing browsers in the dark days of the late 90s, and I am here to tell you it's a mad game to keep up with new browsers and customizing served pages. Heeheeheeheehaahaaaaaa Wooop! (This comment best viewed with Safari browsers for iPhone updated after August 1, 2007 etc.)

That's my first reaction. My second is to ask, why hide the iPhone UI goodness from other browsers. I've seen enough examples of apps that had beautiful and accessible pages full of information, text and objects cleverly hidden and exposed by good, well-behaved javascript; nothing weird, and Firefox-ready to boot. We should test the new design patterns and decide if they could work for a much wider range of contexts and agents. OK, so 400 plus pixel widths won't work, so maybe there is a role after all for that silly link tag hack.

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