Experimental GUI Eases Palmtop Browsing
museumpeace writes "Technology review (in exchange for a revealing cookie) has a short
article describing a PDA browsing improvement from Microsoft/Asia research.
The basic idea is to put the palm top user back in control of page layout by letting them zoom/shrink arbitrary regions of a page with a single stroke of their stylus. A more complete disclosure of the technique will be presented at Seventeenth Annual ACM Symposium on User Interface Software and Technology (UIST 2004), in Santa Fe, New Mexico on October 24 to 27."
This seems to be on the presentation/rendering level, not on the actual website content level.
/. tradition I did not RTFA, and I can agree with the viepoint that MS can do an especially screwed-up implementation of a simple and nice idea.
Sounds like mouse gestures, decent electronic (and other) CAD programs have had those for years. As in, draw an 'L' with middle button pressed in Mentor and it will zoom into the area defined by L's bounding box. Or draw Z/z to zoom in/out, etc...
OTOH, in the finest
Paul B.
Since when have web developers ever cared about compatibility issues? How many really care if your screen is too small to view something that is 600px from the left side of your monitor or if 10px Arial is too small or 20px Times New Roman is too big for you? Pixel measurements in CSS or even elaborate table layouts is the worst thing that happened to HTML, IMO. With the possible exception of aligning something with an image and defining visible borders (not padding), using pixel measurements on a CSS is a sure sign you're doing something wrong.
I used up all my sick days, so I'm calling in dead.