- From: Aral Balkan <aral@aralbalkan.com>
- Date: Fri, 2 Jul 2010 14:28:14 +0100
Hi Marques, I'm an interaction designer/developer, not a rocket scientist. :) A meta tag, I can easily add. If you start talking about HTTP headers, you've lost me. i.e., this is meant to be a pragmatic, easy-to-author solution. Thanks, Aral On Fri, Jul 2, 2010 at 2:13 PM, Marques Johansson <marques at displague.com> wrote: <snip> > And what if the image was named "images/flower" (using the accept header to > send a jpg vs png vs gif) instead of "flower.jpg". ?The browser would need > to have rules about how to rewrite the name of the file. ?I think "@" in the > filename would break the many Dos 6.22 based web servers ;-). > I don't think a single element with a single attribute can handle this > problem. > What about an HTTP header like: > Accept: image/*;ppiratio=2 > This would allow the server to send the correct images for that client or > return a 307 to the rewritten filename as the server deems fit. ?A new > Accept property doesn't seem to require changing any specs. ??I'ld like to > think that image/*;q=x could be used in some way for this. > On Fri, Jul 2, 2010 at 8:39 AM, Aral Balkan <aral at aralbalkan.com> wrote: >> I just submitted a proposal for a new meta tag to flag that >> high-resolution images are available and should be loaded in place of >> low-resolution ones for users with high-PPI displays (like the new >> iPhone 4's Retina display). >> >> Please see: >> >> http://wiki.whatwg.org/wiki/MetaExtensions#Proposals <snip>
Received on Friday, 2 July 2010 06:28:14 UTC