11-17-2004, 05:20 PM | #1 |
Is papyrophobic!
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Mobile browsers only use a small sliver of information
Russel Baettie wrote some interesting bits on "The Mobile Web", in which he argues to push web standards forward to better support mobile web browsers.
Look at the little graphic I made above. I've tried to show how the web is this vast repository of information, and how the mobile phone right now only has access to a small sliver of that information. The big orange blob is the public stuff, the black behind is the private web. The ways to interact with that information on your phone is limited: You can reformat it with Small Screen Rendering, view only the pages meant for mobiles, view the XML in various ways, or somehow see all the information out there in some magic, yet to be determined manner. Or hell, you can just ignore the web as it is now all together and find some alternative way of getting information to the mobile devices (which isn't pictured). |
11-17-2004, 05:43 PM | #2 |
Recovering Gadget Addict
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I'm hoping that the control of formatting remains somewhat in the hands of the viewer, rather than in the hands of the content creator. For example, we are now able to manage the html and manipulate it. What if everything turns into flash components and we can't manage what it looks like or how much bandwidth and cpu it takes? Or if they want to make us watch intrusive advertising before we can see any text? Even if that ad is in mobie rendering format, I'm not going to like it.
Again, it's the battle between control of content and the ways it gets used (so they can suck money and attention out of the viewer), versus the public which is the content users. I think laws should support the overall good, not overprotect a few select content producers and distributers. I'm not convinced that no one will create artistic or useful content if they can't make big bucks off of it. And if content availability falls off slightly, but I get all the rest of it cheaper or free, who cares! I really am opinionated this week, aren't I? Must be stress working its way out! |
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11-17-2004, 05:47 PM | #3 |
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This is a wonderful article. As an amateur webmaster myself, I know how hard it is to make sure that one's site works on as many platforms as possible.
There is another article which came out today that fits in nicely. It discusses how the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) is considering to make mobile web access more widely available. |
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