Hi,
On Sun, Jun 29, 2014 at 1:33 AM, Florian Schmidt florian.schmidt.welzow@t-online.de wrote:
For me, that seems to be normal for desktop sites on mobile devices (that's one of the plusses to use MobileFrontend :P). For example see the Nexus 7 Screenshots from Wikipedia and another website (on the other website you see the difference between the "normal" font size (very little and blurry) and a bigger font (better to read)). If you zoom the site in the browser, the font is much clearer and bigger, so better to read, so on Android tablet, I think on iPad, too.
Well, I don't think any of that is relevant here. It's not such an unexpected use/edge case that we should ignore regressions or just tell people they should be using MobileFrontend.
The user says it's a new problem. With a regression you can at least do a binary search of the git commits and minimize a test case to narrow down the cause. Unlike implementing a new feature or fixing a bug that we might have always had. (or have had as long as the corresponding feature existed)
Normally the user will be automatically redirected to the Mobile optimized site (MobileFrontend) with an iPad, so, if he want to see the desktop site, he must opt-out with the link at the bottom.
Only since we started redirecting tablets too. (in the last ~2 weeks)
-Jeremy