The Mobile Revolution

Preview:

DESCRIPTION

The Mobile Revolution

Citation preview

@darcehess

www.linkedin.com/in/darcehess/

http://www.youtube.com/user/DarceHess

D’arce HessDeveloper, Athlete and MusicianPixelMill

Blog: www.thebrandingbutterfly.com

Website: www.pixelmill.com

Email: dhess@pixelmill.com

Developing SharePoint solutions

since 2004

SharePoint Branding and UI Specialists

Developer of Cost effective

SharePoint Templates

Your SharePoint Branding Experts

Have you looked up a website on your mobile device and had to pinch the screen to expand the content to reach the information you need?

Steps to Mobile Recovery

1. Is this you?

2. Admit you have a UI/UX problem

3. Seek help

4. Have better experience

Users accessed information using a single device.

Used Keyboard and a mouse to deliver user experience.

• Allowed for individual masterpages to target specific devices.

• Allowed for a unique viewing experience

• Required users to maintain multiple masterpages in order to provide unified experience for users.

• Only available in SharePoint 2013 Publishing Sites.

• Can have a maximum of 10 device channels.

Named by Steve Champeon in 2003.

Focuses on Content first

Not a good fit for SharePoint since SharePoint starts with a desktop view first.

Ethan Marcotte coined the term responsive web design (RWD) in a May 2010 article in A List Apart.

Uses fluid grids and CSS3 Media Queries to adjust layout as screen width decreases.

The fluid grid concept calls for page element sizing to be in relative units like percentages, but can also use pixels or points.

All content remains and adjusts to the screen width

The fluid grid system uses percents instead of pixels for column widths ensuring proper proportions for key screen resolutions and devices.

Desktop View

Tablet View

Phone View

Here are some common break points to use for your RWD sites

320 px — Mobile portrait480 px — Mobile landscape600 px — Small tablet768 px — Tablet portrait1024 px — Tablet landscape/Netbook1280 px & greater — Desktop

Adaptive – “Serving or Able to adapt, like the coloring of a chameleon.”

Focuses more on presentation than on content.

Items may selected to be hidden or not presented as screen width decreases. i.e. Banner images or columns.

Desktop

Tablet Mobile