Knowing Your Audience
As with most design challenges, making appropriate decisions regarding which browsers to support and which new technologies to adopt largely depends on knowing your audience. Before designing a new site, be sure to spend plenty of time up front researching the likely platforms, browsers, technical savvy, and connection speeds of the users you are targeting. If you are redesigning an existing site, spend time with the server logs to analyze past site usage.
There are no browser-support guidelines that can anticipate every design situation; however, the following scenarios should start you thinking:
If you are designing a scientific or academic site, you should probably pay extra attention to how your site functions in Lynx (or other graphics-free browsing environments), because Lynx is more commonly used on academic and scientific networks than by the Web community at large. In addition, since the academy tends to be more Unix-oriented, Netscape figures more prominently than Internet Explorer because it is better supported.
If your site is aimed at a consumer audience—for instance, a site that sells educational toys to a primarily parent audience—don’t ignore your site’s performance and presentation in the AOL browsers or older browser versions.
If you are designing for a controlled environment, such as a corporate intranet or, even better, a web-based kiosk, you’ve got it made! Knowing exactly what browser and platform your viewers are using means you can take ...
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