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Welcome to North Fork IT Services & woodlandcomputerrepair.com
The importance of Browser Optimization

This section contains important information that you should understand if you are considering a website, designing your own website, or are searching for an experienced web designer to design your site for you.

To use America Online as an example: AOL has approx. 32 million subscribers between it's Dial-Up and High Speed internet services. If your browser is only optimized for Internet Explorer that is 32 million potential customers who might not be able to view your web site.

How many of the Internet Browsers listed below do you recognize?
What is a Web Browser?

A Web browser is a program used to view, download, upload, surf or otherwise access documents (pages) on the World Wide Web.

Browsers can be text-based meaning they do not show graphics or images but most however are text and graphical based. Browsers read "marked up" or coded pages (usually HTML but not always) that reside on servers and interpret the coding into what we see "rendered" as a Web page.

Microsoft Internet Explorer, Maxthon, Mozilla, Mozilla Firefox, Netscape Navigator, and Opera, are examples of popular Web browsers.

What is a WYSIWYG?

Pronounced WIZ-zee-wig, this term is short for "what you see is what you get."

A WYSIWYG application is one that enables you to see on the display screen exactly what will appear when the document is viewed. WYSIWYG is especially popular for desktop publishing and website design. The two most well known WYSIWYG applications are Microsoft Front Page and Macromedia Dreamweaver.

What is Browser Optimization?

Browser Optimization is creating your website for multiple types of Web browsers--to provide trouble-free access to the widest possible audience.

The World Wide Web is a multi-platform, non-browser specific medium. It should not matter whether people browse your Web pages using Netscape, Explorer, Opera, Lynx, WebTV, NetPhonic's Web-On-Call, Mobile Telephones, or Personal Digital Assistants (PDAs, or palmtops, the little computers with screens the size of a credit card).

Each browser ought to render your informational Web pages without problems. If a Web page is designed properly, blind individuals, or anyone using text-to-voice or Braille displays, can easily listen to and review your work.

To keep it simple: Your website should look the same no matter what you view it with.

Examples of GOOD Browser Optimization?
Using the North Fork IT Services site as an example here is what this web site looks like in the five browsers pictured above.
 
Please click on the picture to view it in a larger window. A new window will open with each example so that you can compare them.
 
 
 
             
Examples of BAD Browser Optimization - Using Microsoft FrontPage.

If the person designing your website uses the WYSIWYG Microsoft FrontPage. and does not specifically program it to be read by other browsers your website will only be viewable with Internet Explorer.

This means that your site will appear "broken" to users who choose another Browser.

 
Click the pictures below for an example of the North Fork IT Services site as it would look when designed in Microsoft FrontPage. for Internet Explorer. This will open the example in a new window so that you can compare. These are full versions of these screens and may take up to 30 second to load if you are using dial-up.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
     
As you can see from the examples, while the site looks great using Internet Explorer, it looks terrible with the other browsers.
The best and easiest way to avoid this trap of web design:
When designing your own site or researching a web designer be sure to ask them which Internet Browsers they preview and test the sites they design in before final upload. Professional designers test in at least three of the six browsers pictured above. North Fork IT Services tests in all six to ensure that your website will be seamless across the internet.
     

Remember that your website only has a few seconds to catch a customers eye. If they see a broken up website, or a site that isn't being read correctly by the Browser they are using they will 'click off' and go to another website.

RETURN TO THE FREE WEB DESIGN 101 - HELP PAGE

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