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| Thread ID: 135273 | 2013-10-15 04:10:00 | Windows Surface RT | bk T (215) | Press F1 |
| Post ID | Timestamp | Content | User | ||
| 1356097 | 2013-10-16 02:33:00 | So what browser would I be running on a Windows RT tablet? btw, thanks for the video link, I'll check it out.By default in RT comes with IE. If you have access to a normal Windows 8 PC, look on the start screen, there will be IE - That's whats on RT.(different to the desktop version) I have read some others like FF, Chrome etc are making apps, but from what I gather they are not working to well. |
wainuitech (129) | ||
| 1356098 | 2013-10-16 04:30:00 | I'm pretty familiar with IE on Windows. My partner's laptop runs Windows 7 which is what I use for all my browser testing for IE8 and IE9 when I'm building websites. The rest of the time I prefer to use either Chrome or Firefox on Mac (both Chrome and Firefox have better developer tools than IE). Having said all that, I haven't yet bothered to consider Windows Tablet screen sizes into any of my website designs that work on "all" devises(iPad, iPhone and Android for cross browser testing) | Webdevguy (17166) | ||
| 1356099 | 2013-10-16 04:48:00 | Having said all that, I haven't yet bothered to consider Windows Tablet screen sizes into any of my website designs that work on "all" devises(iPad, iPhone and Android for cross browser testing) It would be a good idea if you did, especially when it comes to viewports - IE 10 and 11 only implement the W3C standard (using CSS) for this, while most other browsers implement the legacy HTML method or both. |
pcuser42 (130) | ||
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