First of all, somehow the favorite .ico file of a test responsive website somehow got on my own. Yup , that's right, the favico of a responsive test website is now the favico of my own. Secondly - ow do these work anyway? Are these browser related? For example, all can look great when I use the responsive test site to test my own system - but - when someone else (let's say a client) runs the code (that the Responsive Testsite gave a thumbs-up on), there's a chance where it won't pass or may pass because the client's browser is older?
Is it dangerous to use responsive testsites?
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First of all, somehow the favorite .ico file of a test responsive website somehow got on my own. Yup , that's right, the favico of a responsive test website is now the favico of my own.
Secondly - ow do these work anyway? Are these browser related? For example, all can look great when I use the responsive test site to test my own system - but - when someone else (let's say a client) runs the code (that the Responsive Testsite gave a thumbs-up on), there's a chance where it won't pass or may pass because the client's browser is older?
I guess the test site just uses your own browser and just breaks the page up with iframes (so you don't have to resize manually)?
Secondly - ow do these work anyway? Are these browser related? For example, all can look great when I use the responsive test site to test my own system - but - when someone else (let's say a client) runs the code (that the Responsive Testsite gave a thumbs-up on), there's a chance where it won't pass or may pass because the client's browser is older?
I guess the test site just uses your own browser and just breaks the page up with iframes (so you don't have to resize manually)?
- dgmufasa
- [1] reply
- GeneralLedger
- jasonthewebmaster Banned
- jlucas
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