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Michael Comins

The Future Of The Web Is Mobile | Business 2 Community - 0 views

  • Mobile phone usage and internet traffic are growing at a staggering rate, causing powerful changes in consumer behaviour and in the way people socialise and work together.
  • Most company websites are not easy to use on mobile devices, meaning they are increasingly irrelevant to the average consumer. If you want to attract new customers, build rapport with existing clients or offer new services or other value online, then mobile is on the must-do list.
  • A new approach to mobile-friendly web design is to create a website which will detect and adjust to the size of the device it is viewed on. Mobile responsive website design means a single site works well on all devices, future-proofing your website as new devices become popular.
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  • Responsive design is an attractive alternative to separate mobile apps because it gives the same content to different device users, tailored to their screen size.
Michael Comins

7 Grid Tools for Responsive Web Design | Business 2 Community - 0 views

  • Some of the most popular responsive web design grid tools are Gridpak, Golden Grid System, SimpleGrid, FluidGrids, Columnal, Gridless and The Semantic Grid System.
Michael Comins

What Publishers Should Know When Considering the Switch to Responsive Web Design - 0 views

  • the  change-over to responsive design requires a significant amount of planning.
Michael Comins

Responsive Web Design: The New Mobile Website - 0 views

  • Of course, there is a lot more to this and the mix and meeting point of resizing of images, while also ensuring they keep an air of quality can take plenty of skill. Aside from images and resizing there are other considerations at hand. To jump to the point; sometimes you don’t need to fit all the information from the big screen onto the small screen – the essentials are what matter. Responsive design cuts out all the needless stuff and gives people a web version of the site that is easy to navigate, without them having to zoom in and also provides them with what they want to see. It eliminates the noise and makes the whole mobile browsing experience a pleasure.
Michael Comins

Mobile Optimization: 6 Ways To Prepare Your Site For Web 3.0 | Business 2 Community - 0 views

  • Test your site’s mobile usability. Does your site look good clean on your smartphone? If it doesn’t, get it fixed.
  • Use responsive web designs. You can save yourself and your website visitors headaches by employing a web design that automatically adjusts to the size of screen it’s displayed on. That way, users will get a positive website experience no matter which type of device they use.
  • Develop a mobile app. If you lack the funds to outsource the creation of an app to a company that specializes in it, you can develop an app on your own with platforms like Conduit Mobile.
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  • Make sure your images are high-resolution. Until recently, it wasn’t difficult to get away with using low-quality images on your website. Unfortunately, these kind of images look bad on mobile screens, so they’ll have to go.
  • Simplify your site design. Generally, simple and easy-to-navigate websites do much better with mobile devices. If you’re undergoing a site redesign, consider keeping it simple.
  • Don’t bother with flash. Apple products like the iPhone and iPad don’t support flash. If you’re using flash on your website, you’re not reaching your full audience.
Michael Comins

How Mobile Won The Web-Design Wars - Business Insider - 1 views

  • The abrupt, unexpected rise of native mobile apps starting in 2008 — after a decade-plus of stumbling, fumbling attempts at mobile versions of the Web — forced a radical rethink of interactive design principles.
Michael Comins

The Future Of The Web: The Case For Responsive Design - Forbes - 1 views

  • Mobile adoption is skyrocketing, as is the diversity of mobile devices on the market – smartphones and tablets are currently leading multi-screen customer experiences. Today’s multi-device environment is bolstering mindshare and profile for responsive design because it offers a compelling promise to both website visitors and to those who build the Web: a single website that works on all devices.
Michael Comins

Common mobile web design mistakes | Webdesigner Depot - 0 views

  • Not accounting for device width
  • Making users fill out long forms
  • Not reconsidering content
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  • Eliminating content and functionality for no reason
  • Forgetting the size and limitations of a finger
  • Long page-load times: Heavy image files
  • Long page-load times: Too many images
  • Not taking advantage of CSS3 and HTML5 capabilities
  • Not setting a home screen icon
Michael Comins

The Mobile Revolution: Location | Alister & Paine - 0 views

  • There are two ways to access applications on a mobile device. The first is to simply fire up the mobile Web browser and load a Web application. Existing Web sites are designed for mouse interaction. Mobile interaction is with the finger, thus most Web sites need to be optimized for the mobile Web.
Michael Comins

What is Mobile Marketing? - 0 views

  • Because there are various types of phones, with various types of communications technologies on them, there are also many types of mobile marketing: SMS MMS Mobile Web Apps Bluetooth Location-Based QR Codes Banner Ads Mobile Websites
  • Mobile Website is an optimized website for viewing on a mobile phone.  Since smart phone screens are generally around three inches wide by four inches tall (or thereabouts), viewing a regular website often displays the text and images too small to read. By optimizing websites for mobile devices, your company can deliver a better web experience for the small screen user, thus increasing the chances that user might interact with the site the way you want them to.
  • A perfect example of a well-done mobile website is that of pizza maker Papa John’s. Pick up a smart phone and browse to papajohns.com. (It won’t work in a web browser, you’ll have to see it on your phone.) The site is designed so the on-the-go visitor has just a couple of options and can quickly do the most likely thing a mobile user will want to do on papajohns.com: Order a pizza.
Michael Comins

Preparing for a mobile-first world - Tech News and Analysis - 0 views

  • 1 billion consumers will own smartphones by 2016, with U.S. users owning 257 million smartphones and 126 million tablets. By 2016, 350 million employees will use smartphones, with 200 million of them bringing their own.
  • Mobile spending will reach $1.3 trillion by 2016, or 35 percent of the technology economy, with the app market generating $56 billion by 2015.
  • Apple, Google and Microsoft are expected to control 91 percent of the U.S. smartphone market and 98 percent of the U.S. tablet market by 2016.
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  • Businesses are expected to double their spending on mobile projects by 2015.
  • To stay ahead of these challenges, Forrester recommends that companies install a chief mobility officer (CMOO) to help corral, plan and manage all the different mobile apps and initiatives undertaken by a business.
  • The CMOO should create a mobile design guide that lays out the goals and practices for a company, focusing on mobile-first design, user experience and rapid, agile development processes. The CMOO will also have to oversee the company’s mobile architecture, looking at which technologies to leverage, how to lead the shift to cloud solutions and manage mobile partners and channels.
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