The page history is completely missing, as well as a link to the GFDL-copy, the mobile mirror is therefore not GFDL-conform.
On Fri, Feb 20, 2009 at 12:07 AM, Chad innocentkiller@gmail.com wrote:
I think for anything other than casual browsing, using native clients would be better. Perfect use of the API. I've been trying to get one for Android into decent shape.
-Chad
On Feb 19, 2009 6:03 PM, "Brion Vibber" brion@wikimedia.org wrote:
On 2/19/09 4:14 AM, Angela wrote: > On Thu, Feb 19, 2009 at 9:42 PM, David Gerarddgerard@gmail.com... That depends on how many people have been announcing new mobile platforms. :)
In this work we're mainly targeting the popular has-a-good-browser smartphones. These will be able to do decent editing at least for little bits here and there, and creating a decent interface for doing that -- commenting, typo-fixing, slapping up pictures, maybe taking notes for later "serious" editing -- would be great.
The first attack surface is a decent read-and-search UI, of course, since that's going to be the biggest use.
-- brion
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