- From: Luca Passani <luca.passani@openwave.com>
- Date: Mon, 4 Dec 2006 12:18:36 +0100
- To: <public-bpwg@w3.org>
Rotan, you already provided my counter-argument here. So, my static MobileOK page contains the company logo + a message that says "your device is not recognized and we don't know what it can or can't do. Sorry". Can I go and tell the world that my site is MobileOK or is there something more I need to do? Don't forget that, once the merry-go-round stops, developers will look for practical minimal ways to comply to whatever comes from the top but delivers no extra value. Luca -----Original Message----- From: public-bpwg-request@w3.org [mailto:public-bpwg-request@w3.org] On Behalf Of Rotan Hanrahan Sent: Monday, December 04, 2006 12:12 PM To: public-bpwg@w3.org Subject: RE: test against Gmail Except that you wouldn't. There would be an absence of thematic consistency. Unfortunately, this is not something that one can easily check automatically. Of course, even thematic consistency can be pushed too far. Sometimes it just doesn't make sense to give a certain kind of presentation/service on a certain kind of device. So, we should evaluate sites on what makes sense. Is the content sensible? Is it consistent across devices where this would make sense? Does it default to a sensible type of device in the absence of information about the device? Etc. There are many questions. But to ask an automated checker to do all this for us is asking too much. That's not to undervalue the checker. It's very useful. But it cannot be the only test, as the people behind it acknowledge. ---Rotan -----Original Message----- From: public-bpwg-request@w3.org [mailto:public-bpwg-request@w3.org] On Behalf Of Luca Passani Sent: 04 December 2006 11:04 To: public-bpwg@w3.org Subject: RE: test against Gmail If someone, as a webmaster, just trapped requests coming from the W3C checker and redirected them to a single static MobileOK page (while the rest of the site keeps working as it always did), you would get a perfectly compliant MobileOK site, but wouldn't that be a joke? Luca -----Original Message----- From: public-bpwg-request@w3.org [mailto:public-bpwg-request@w3.org] On Behalf Of Jo Rabin Sent: Monday, December 04, 2006 11:38 AM To: public-bpwg@w3.org Subject: RE: test against Gmail Rhys I take your point, and Rotan's, and think that you both eloquently make a case for removing the prescription that the default experience provided by a mobileOK site should be a mobile one. If the text of mobileOK is to be adjusted to reflect this sentiment, then it would be a good idea for that to be done asap, I think. Hopefully either you or he will raise an issue to that effect. On the narrower point of 'does the checker check mobile only sites?' I assume that the W3C checker sends the 'W3C mobileOK DDC' user agent header, so a site should have no difficulty in choosing a mobileOK experience in this case. Cheers Jo > -----Original Message----- > From: public-bpwg-request@w3.org [mailto:public-bpwg-request@w3.org] > On Behalf Of Rhys Lewis > Sent: 04 December 2006 10:08 > To: Jo Rabin; public-bpwg@w3.org > Subject: RE: test against Gmail > > > Hi Jo, > > The phrase 'if the nature of the user agent cannot reliably be determined' > is the problem. It turns out that there are lots of user agents out > there with odd signatures. They might be robots, or custom versions of > mainstream browsers, or other things, but they all expect desktop content. > > Hence, application developers experienced in the art of supporting > mobile and non-mobile devices default to sending desktop content if > the UA can't be identified. That's excellent practice for mainstream > multi-channel applications, like GMail, but is not good practice in > terms of MWI BP or for sites that concentrate more on supporting > mobile devices than on supporting crawlers or customised browsers. > It's really a decision for the site owners on which they would rather do. > > Cheers > Rhys > > -----Original Message----- > From: public-bpwg-request@w3.org [mailto:public-bpwg-request@w3.org] > On Behalf Of Jo Rabin > Sent: 04 December 2006 09:15 > To: public-bpwg@w3.org > Subject: RE: test against Gmail > > > > > So you could argue that it is inappropriate to test Gmail using the > > checker since it does so much more than just mobile support. The > > checker tells you if you are mobileONLY. > > > > >From mobileOK Basic: "mobileOK says nothing about what may be > >delivered to > non-mobile devices from that URI; however, note that a mobileOK URI > must return mobileOK content by default if the nature of the user > agent cannot reliably be determined". > > So I don't think the above is correct. I think the checker checks that > in certain circumstances a site provides a mobileOK experience. I > don't see that its results are valid only if a site provides _only_ a > mobile experience. > > Jo > > >
Received on Monday, 4 December 2006 11:19:04 UTC