WebProWorld Part of WebProNews.com
Page One Link To Us Edit Profile Private Messages Archives FAQ RSS Feeds  
 

Go Back   WebProWorld > Site Design > Graphics & Design Discussion Forum
Subscribe to the Newsletter FREE!


Register FAQ Members List Calendar Arcade Chatbox Mark Forums Read

Graphics & Design Discussion Forum Post your graphics design questions/comments/ideas in here. Ask questions, post tutorials, discuss trends and best practices. Sub-forum for website accessibility and usability.

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1 (permalink)  
Old 06-27-2006, 12:30 PM
jmiller's Avatar
jmiller jmiller is offline
WebProWorld Veteran
 

Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Lexington, KY
Posts: 658
jmiller RepRank 0
Default Tech Giants Publish Mobile Web Guidelines

A large group of major technology and Web companies have published a set of guidelines for developing mobile Web content. The Worldwide Web Consortium (W3C), consisting of companies like Google, Microsoft, and Nokia, released its "Mobile Web Best Practices 1.0" today as part of a larger effort to make Web more accessible worldwide.

The group says the publication embodies a "broad consensus" of how mobile web content should be created to avoid technical issues when viewed from mobile devices. The group also includes tech giants AOL, AT&T, Ericsson, GoDaddy, and Vodafone.

"There are many devices, but one Web," said Daniel Appelquist, chair of the Mobile Web Best Practices Working Group. "Practical guidelines on how to create content once that can be delivered to the plethora of devices saves developers and organizations time and money. "

"Mobile Web Best Practices 1.0" provides practical advice on creating mobile content with instructions for authors, developers, designers, and other content producers wishing to avoid "known pitfalls," such as pop-ups and page-scrolling. In conjunction with the guidelines, W3C has also launched a wiki to collect observations and suggestions, as well as descriptions of implementation experiences.

The group says that readers are not expected to have a background in mobile-specific technologies. The guidelines are intended for creators, maintainers and operators of Websites who have a general familiarity with Web severs and HTTP.

"Nokia believes the use of the Web via mobile browsers will be the next big step towards making information and content available globally to everybody, including billions of people for whom their mobile phone will be their first and only means of Internet access," said Timo Ali-Vehmas, Vice President of Standardization and Industry Relations for Nokia.

"To achieve this it is important to provide the Web community with the right set of tools to make it easier to deliver information and content in mobile-friendly way. Mobile Web Best Practices Candidate Recommendation is an important step towards this goal."

Opera's Chief Standards Officer, Charles McCathieNevile, called the Best Practices release "timely."

"While the best mobile browsers can provide a great internet experience for any content, it is more efficient and more effective when content has been designed to take account of basic design requirements, and these guidelines will help authors to ensure that their content works as well as possible on the entire internet," said McCathieNevile.
__________________
"I never met a Kentuckian who wasn't coming home."--Governor Happy Chandler
Reply With Quote
  #2 (permalink)  
Old 06-28-2006, 02:55 AM
mantawebsolutions's Avatar
mantawebsolutions mantawebsolutions is offline
WebProWorld Veteran
 

Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Pretoria, South Africa
Posts: 306
mantawebsolutions RepRank 0
Default

There is a market out there that cannot be ignored. Mobile phones and PDA's have taken the world by force and the time has come for web designers as well as website owners to start looking at this alternative marketing method.

Until now WML (for WAP enabled phones) and XHTML have been used, now it seems there is something new.

Forgive me if it sounds like I don't know too much, well, that is the case, I don't know enough, but here is what I have found.

We need to convert to Compact HTML or cHTML, which is the coding language of i-Mode.

Quote:
Unlike WML used for WAP devices, c-HTML is a subset of HTML that leaves out coding for JPEG images, tables, image map, multiple character fonts and styles, background color or images, frames, and cascading style sheets. These things are excluded due to the low bandwidth and limited screen-size of cellphones. Not only is cHTML simpler than WML for WAP phones, but developers need only make one version of the site for all i-mode devices, whereas WAP developers complain they must develope multiple versions for different WAP phones.

source: www.palowireless.com/imode/aboutchtml.asp
Here is another great resource: www.alistapart.com/articles/pocket

and another: www.palowireless.com/imode/

Now, excuse me, I am off to go and do some reading/studying on this subject...
Reply With Quote
Reply

  WebProWorld > Site Design > Graphics & Design Discussion Forum
Tags: giants, guidelines, mobile, publish, tech, web



Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On



Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO 3.0.0