Jo Ann wrote:[quote=Eric Rohloff][quote=Jo Ann]
All I'm saying is that when you do that on a phone you are loadding the entire desktop version of the website rather than a mobile version so you are going to use more data than you would if the phone were properly reading mobile version.
But.. I was sold on buying RLM because I didn't have to do separate versions of websites.
RLM Website http://www.coffeecup.com/help/articles/a-website-needs-to-adapt-or-die/ wrote:With all the different device sizes out there, a design that adjusts or ‘responds’ to the available display space is the only way to assure a consistent and positive experience on every screen. Every website needs to be responsive and adapt to screen dimensions. Soon a troublesome encounter with a static websites will communicate a negative brand experience.
And a little further down the page :
No need for dedicated sites for desktops, tablets, and mobile devices.
There isn't any different version, it's the same content. As Mansour said above, data is loaded whether it's viewed or not.
That's why I got RLM - I don't have the time or the web-building skills to work through making a site work on everything (I did use ems with previous sites and if I'd explored enough I might have found that I could use that as the default - is there a way to change it with RLM when you've put in a dozen hours on the wrong setting?)
Jo Ann wrote:
If he's got his phone setup for that high of a resolution, then there's really not much you can do for what he's going to see without complicating matters extremely. Not worth it in my book as it's not the norm.
Not that long ago, it wasn't worth it to build a website specifically for a mobile phone because "it wasn't normal" to view a website from a mobile.
Screen resolutions are getting higher (even back to what we had with CRT's if you're willing to shell out megabux for a super high resolution
), and users are getting stupider (based on experience at the coal-face of IT support
), telling them to change mobile phone settings because some pages might not display properly is a nightmare that'd not be worth it. This is something we're going to have to deal with more and more I expect, and I'd rather deal with it from the outset then find I have another re-design to do at a later stage..
That said, I am quite enjoying playing with RLM and it helps another large group of our clients - elderly customers who, no matter how high their screen resolution is, have the display size set large enough to read easily. Which breaks the current header in ways too horrid to name
david@kiwiscene.kiwi