| Links: AOL Browser Features and Functionality Table
HTML syntax is constantly evolving. In addition to changing industry standards, there are also common extensions of the standards that are inconsistently supported by various browsers. Test your site design decisions against at least the last two major versions of the AOL browser. Below, for your reference, are the versions of the AOL browser and the features and functionality they support.
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Schrijf een recensie | Voeg to aan del.icio.us Browser Arrogance and Customers Don't Mix
Building degradable, accessible Web sites takes a lot of additional work, but will most certainly pay off. Whether you care about Lynx users or not, a site that considers multiple browsers is seldom a poorly designed site. Consider yourself warned.
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Schrijf een recensie | Voeg to aan del.icio.us Browsers, Browsers, Browsers! A Strategic Guide to Browser Interoperability
With new releases of Netscape and Opera, the Web browser issue is getting more—not less—complicated. Steve Franklin, the editor of our newly updated Web Browser Guide, offers a step-by-step strategy to help you make the best decisions regarding browser considerations for your sites. [Webreview 29/12/2000]
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Schrijf een recensie | Voeg to aan del.icio.us Common Browser Implementation Issues
The following chart discusses many of the common activities that need to be performed across a variety of browsers. For each task, the differences between browsers are outlined, and a "safe approach" is suggested as a way to reconcile differences across the browsers. [Webreview 2001]
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Schrijf een recensie | Voeg to aan del.icio.us Grassroots Enforcers: The Web Standards Project
Unlike many industries, the Web has no legal or governmental enforcement of standards. While this freedom is great for innovation, when vendors start engineering for the "Wow!" factor rather than accessibility, the users are the ones who lose. However, the Internet always fights back, and a loose-knit collection of individuals have banded together in the form of the Web Standards Project to ensure that users don't lose out. I talked to Jeffrey Zeldman, leader of the group, about the project and their views on XML standards.
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Schrijf een recensie | Voeg to aan del.icio.us Preparing for standard-compliant browsers
The purpose of this tutorial is to start you off on that educational process and to help you to get into the right frame of mind to adapt to the new browsers—and hopefully to ease your pain a little along the way. Part 1 deals with HTML and CSS and weaning yourself from past sins. In Part 2 we will look into Javascript and the Document Object Model (DOM). Also for the sake of simplicity the focus is on Internet Explorer and Netscape Navigator.
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Schrijf een recensie | Voeg to aan del.icio.us Real World Cross-Browser HTML Development
Beginners might assume that this would be an effortless task because both Netscape Navigator and Microsoft Internet Explorer support the HTML standard. However, HTML developers quickly learn that standards are great in principle, but often loosely supported. Developers must learn how each browser renders HTML because they handle various tags in subtly different ways. Often, the discrepancies are so small that they aren't noticeable, but that's not always the case. Let's consider two examples: the TABLE tag and using the image type within the INPUT tag.
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Schrijf een recensie | Voeg to aan del.icio.us Real-World Browser Size Stats, Part I
Everybody has their own take on what resolution their users have. Sometimes that target resolution is based on hard data, sometimes it's a best-guess, and sometimes it's just based on the designer's own personal preferences. One thing this ignores, however, is the window size of the user. Not all users at 1,024 x 768 resolution surf at full screen, so designing a page at 1,000 pixels wide would not be a good idea. This article offers a way to determine if that's true for your site. Instead of just guessing what resolution users of my company's site have, I decided to test it for myself. In addition, I wanted to know each user's window size and each user's bit-depth. This article will describe my methods. In Part 2, I'll discuss my results.
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Schrijf een recensie | Voeg to aan del.icio.us Sizing up the browsers
The purpose of this quick reference is to collect everything you need to know about the spatial aspects of the major browsers. [Webmonkey 14/10/1999]
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Schrijf een recensie | Voeg to aan del.icio.us The Browser War continued: XML support in IE and Mozilla
IE5 en Netscape XML compatible?
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Schrijf een recensie | Voeg to aan del.icio.us The Myth of 800x600
Developing fixed-size Web pages is a fundamentally flawed practice. Not only does it result in Web pages that remain at a constant size regardless of the user's browser size, but it fails to take advantage of the medium's flexibility. Nonetheless, Web site creators continue to develop fixed pages. [Webreview 16/03/2001]
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