“Elements that rely only on mousemove, mouseover, mouseout or the CSS pseudo-class :hover may not always behave as expected on a touch-screen device such as iPad or iPhone.” A few days after Steve Jobs announced the release of the iPad, I read that sentence in Apple’s Reference Library: Preparing Your Web Content for iPad, and started to realize the drastic implications the evolution of multi-touch would have on interaction design. Anything we design for the web that requires a hover state has an uncertain future and could be subject to serious usability issues.
- Joakim
The nav element represents a section of a page that links to other pages or to parts within the page: a section with navigation links. Not all groups of links on a page need to be in a nav element only sections that consist of major navigation blocks are appropriate for the nav element.
- Joakim
Och det är ju helt rätt: "To be clear, IE6 isn’t the only browser getting the axe. Firefox 1.0 and 2.0, Safari 2.0 and 3.0, and even Chrome versions 1, 2, and 3 are all being pulled. “This will allow us to spend our time improving Reader instead of fixing issues with antiquated browsers,” Google writes. Again, this will happen June 1."
- Joakim
"get £100 off the prevailing price" The full conference and expo costs £549; early-bird registration at £499 ends on April 30. However, if you register using the code Yahoo, you will get £100 off the prevailing price. So, register by May 1 for the bargain price of £399. Full-day workshops on June 8 and 9 are each £299 for conference attendees; £325 for others.
- Joakim