I've found a free test account at http://www.browserpool.com
to be very
useful for testing.
Keven
Thomas Dowling wrote:
> On 5/29/2007 12:36 PM, Nancy E. Sosna Bohm wrote:
>
>
>> In what versions of browsers should an academic
website display with all of
>> its design features intact?
>> For example, in NS4 a page might not be laid out as
intended, though the
>> elements are all present and functional.
>> But should a page look identical in, say, Firefox
2.0 and Firefox 1.0.7 ?
>>
>>
>
>
> You've got to get beyond the idea that any page should
look "identical"
> for any two users, let alone any two browsers.
>
> Coupla thoughts off the top of my head:
>
> Validate your markup and CSS, and check for any
unexpected hiccups in
> current versions of IE, Firefox, and Safari.
>
> Test with a screen reader, or in Lynx as a reasonable
approximation.
> (Or Opera with all images and styles turned off, or
Firefox with the Web
> Developer add-on set likewise, etc.).
>
> Test with a tool like <http://colorfilte
r.wicklin.org/> or drop
> screenshots into a photo editor and see what they look
like in greyscale.
>
> Drop a screenshot into a photo editor, blur the
picture, and see if you
> can still make sense of the page structure. (That is,
is top-level
> navigation and main link structure comprehensible at a
glance without
> forcing the user to read?)
>
> Test on a high-resolution screen with Firefox set to
enforce a minimum
> font size of, say, 12px.
>
> Test with scripting turned off.
>
> If your stylesheet is tricked out to optimize display
of Verdana, test
> on a machine that doesn't have Verdana.
>
> Test in a 750-px wide window and a 1500-px wide window.
Test on a cell
> phone or PDA.
>
>
>
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