Mobile Accessibility Your website in the year 20

Mobile Accessibility Your website in the year 2005

by: Philip Wylie

Throughout 2004 the number of web enabled portable devices boomed. By ขportable devicesก I mean PDAs and smart phones. What does this mean for you? Well it depends whether or not you care about your visitors’ experience you build your website for visitors so you really should!

Nokia, Vodafone, Microsoft and others have already applied to ICANN for the new TLD (Top Level Domain) .mobi. If the new TLD is accepted not only will this create hundreds more ขdomain for saleข sites but will it will also help mobile users find optimized pages.

When a website optimized for a desktop computer is viewed on a small screen, the horizontal scrollbars are usually stretched by the header and footer, inevitably this means the textual content area is also stretched. กFit to screenก on Pocket PCs shrinks images on the page and attempts to display the text on one screen without horizontal scrollbars.

There is no need to create a whole new site dedicated for mobile users, as not only would that be time consuming it is also unnecessary, due to mobile browsers being able to render most code without problems. Simply make your new site with a more logical, clean appearance. You should avoid relying on drop down menus for navigation as they use ขmouse overข and JavaScript which doesn’t necessarily work.

When building your website I recommend that you use a top header with a horizontal menu underneath preferably not made from images as the user may have selected not to view images. If you must use images for navigation remember to add alt tags. If your content area uses columns be sure that the main contents are on the left. The ขfit to screenข function will move the text to the left hand side saving the visitor from having to scroll. The footer should contain a link to the top of the page in the form of an anchor tag. A link to your sitemap is important as it allows visitors to reach the information they want quickly.

Optimize your images as usual in GIF/JPEG formats. Testing your website is vital before you fully launch to the public, try viewing your site with a number of different devices. If the browser is able, use กfit to screenก and view the page without images. It doesn’t have to be perfect just as long as you can easily navigate all your pages and view the content without scrolling.

About The Author

Philip Wylie is the CEO of PWnet, a company offering web solutions to all types of business. For more information visit www.pwnet.org.uk or to contact him email [email protected].

[email protected]

This article was posted on January 04

by Philip Wylie