At 02:33 PM 6/8/99 +0200, Martijn Faassen rightfully pointed out:
There are estimates that a [put in large % figure here]% of the time when doing web designing goes into fiddling around browser incompatibilities. The Mozilla pre-alphas look good in their implementation of web standards, though, so change is hopefully coming. Though we'll have to deal with the older browsers just about forever, I guess..
One would hope that at least basic CSS could help put a stop to this. I'm about to embark on a gratis project for a transit company. Of course they're a non profit, don't have two pennies to rub together, and need to be 100% readable/usable by those with visual limitations. So if you're using Lynx, doing JavaScript and what have you is not an option but CSS and server-side logic (where Zope seems to excel) is clearly the way to go. My personal feeling is that you can strike a good balance between usability, aesthetics, and to be as lazy as possible by putting most of your logic server-side. I guess good are Salon (www.salon.com) and news.com -- both are mostly text-based and are even pretty usable in Lynx! Tom's site is a rarity -- not only does it do bunches of whizzy client side things, it's got a lot of great content. I'm just tucking in to Alan Cooper's "The Inmates are Running the Asylum" (http://www.cooper.com/design.html) and his take on Web sites that look good but have no content is "painted corpses". :-) Highly recommended reading.