
Surfing the Internet on a
personal digital assistant, Pocket PC, or any mobile device is both an alluring and a confusing experience. Because everything that you hate about the wild worldly web when you check it in the big screen is also present in the small screens. And the most confusing part is that it's very hard to check e-mails and research in the small device because the text is barely readable.
It's a good thing that the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) make good use of their time to develop guidelines about mobile practices to be followed by
web browsers and websites. The rules aim to give users of mobile gadgets a more exciting and convenient mobile web browsing. It also tries to upgrade the content of the net and its look in the petite transflective screens. W3Cs efforts on improving and upgrading mobile web quality lead to a lot of opportunities not only for users, but as well as with device makers. As we all know cellphones and PDAs are being honed as the next supercomputing devices aside from the portable laptops that we have learned to love. With more improvements on mobile computing, for sure, consumers are to expect a lot of new products powered by the most advanced technologies in the coming years.