I have a site home page live for the client to approve and they mentioned that it doesn’t work that well on a mobile.
Should this now be a given, that all sites created work on all devices, or would you other professionals out there think this was an extra above a normal site.
They have not mentioned this before, so what is the best way forward in this respect? All site to be inline?
Most people I know treat it as an additional service but there’s no hard-n-fast rule. Do what works best for your situation.
Yes, an inline design is a good start but you will also need to implement @media queries to customize the mobile experience.
Todd
Should this now be a given, that all sites created work on all devices, or would you other professionals out there think this was an extra above a normal site.
They have not mentioned this before, so what is the best way forward in this respect? All site to be inline?
I’ve recently had to deal with this. I am solving it my creating responsive websites - that have the same code and don’t depend on browser width. It’s quite a phenomenal way to go about it.
Search for “freeway backdraft template” in google.
I am able to do however I’m not sure if it is THE way. There are still two chapters - the “Responsives” that deal with one page source and the “Redirectings” that probably deal with two different contents.
Whatever you do:
A regular page should display well even on small devices. I can’t judge your project, but mine are usually drastically reduced and very “small”. They play - however a user has to zoom in to read proper - but technically seen - it should work.
I leave no doubt:
A proper Box-in-Box construction is not a good start - it’s the essential of these days. Without you’ll ever have similar discussions.
Backdraft is cool - you’ll live with and and probably you’ll even die with it, whatever you do: