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e primary design principle underlying the Web’s usefulness and growth is universality. e Web should be usable by people with disabilities. It must work with any form of information, be it a document or a point of data, and information of any quality—om a silly tweet to a scholarly paper. And it should be accessible om any kind of hardware that can connect to the Internet: stationary or mobile, small screen or large. —Tim Berners-Lee Long Live the Web “ ”

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print

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print

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print

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Grid System + The Page order constraint control

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web

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control web

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Table Layout The Browser order constraint control +

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CSS The Browser order constraint control +

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The Browser unknown

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speed unknown capability size

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size 640 x 480 800 x 600 1024 x 768 fixed

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flexible %

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e control which designers know in the print medium, and oen desire in the web medium, is simply a function of the limitation of the printed page. We should embrace the fact that the web doesn’t have the same constraints, and design for this flexibility.” —John Allsopp A Dao of Web Design “

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WYSIWTF

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speed capability size unknown

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mobile web desktop tablet

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one web flexible

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Rather than tailoring disconnected designs to each of an ever-increasing number of web devices, we can treat them as facets of the same experience. We can design for an optimal viewing experience, but embed standards-based technologies into our designs to make them not only more flexible, but more adaptive to the media that renders them.” —Ethan Marcotte Responsive Web Design “

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It’s my belief that in order to embrace designing native layouts for the web – whatever the device – we need to shed the notion that we create layouts om a canas in. We need to flip it on its head, and create layouts om the content out.” —Mark Boulton A Richer Canvas “

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My loe for responsive centers around the idea that my website will meet you wherever you are —om mobile to full-blown desktop and anywhere in between.” —Trent Walton Fit To Scale “

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