> Yea, I can't speak to number 3, but reading up on how 1.3 deals with
> events would be helpful there. As for #2, I don't know what standards
> they're recommending you play to, but I ALWAYS hide from the CSS
> instead of the javascript. The reason is twofold:
>
> #1: So if there is no javascript enabled, then they don't get to see
> anything but the layout.
> #2: A good 80% of my content comes in via ajax, so if JS is disabled,
> they're going to have a tough time viewing the rest of my site.
> #3: Who tools around with JS disabled anymore? Are there honestly a
> group of people who do? Are these the same people who still have
> cookies turned off and expect the internet to do interesting things?
> Honestly, spending an extra hour and a half of dev time in a massive
> project to make the site kind-of-work for people without jS is a waste
> of time.
Depends on your public. If you're coding the USPS website that is a
serious concern.
- ricardo
No comments:
Post a Comment