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Screen Resolution

Which screen resolution is the most common?

         

pgsbs

6:08 am on Jan 29, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



After complaints about my site that the navigation was unclear, and some other things, I've decided to change my design. I have already uploaded the design when I saw the big difference on screen between the computer I build the site on and the computer that's connected to the internet. The first one has a smaller screen (which the site is optimized for), the second a much bigger screen.

Which screen resolution is the most common??
I'll be optimizing my website for that resolution.

Thanx in advance.

justa

7:01 am on Jan 29, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Check out [w3schools.com...]

tedster

7:06 am on Jan 29, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I've seen several different sets of recent stats. It's running around 50% at 800x600. But 1024x768 (and up) has made gains this past year to up 40% or so. And 640x480 is down below 10%.

I wouldn't worry about the very biggest resolutions - it's not common for people to run a browser at full screen at those resolutions. But I think you need to account for both the 1024 and the 800 user in your design.

4eyes

10:18 am on Jan 29, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Interesting question.

The 4% that use Netscape 4.x
The 4% that use 640x480
The 4% that use 256 colours

What is the crossover?

I don't mind making the odd compromise to net the 4% of users that are still with the old Netscape - but I am not prepared to do 640x48, 256 colors AND Netscape 4.x

If this reduces the Netscape 4.x target group to 1 or 2% then 's*d 'em' and IE only from now on.

thoughts anyone?

TallTroll

12:15 pm on Jan 29, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Simple economics dictate that most of our design work is aimed at 1024 and 800 res, and IE4+, with some consideration given to NS4+

The overwhelming factor for most of our clients is cost, and as time is money, we have to be as quick as possible. This means that we have to build sites that reach as many people as possible, in the shortest time we can

mattur

1:08 pm on Jan 29, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Take a tip from this site: go liquid baby!

TallTroll

1:26 pm on Jan 29, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



>> Take a tip from this site: go liquid baby

Can't in the majority of cases. We use a proprietory tool for a lot of design work which forces us to do things a certain way. Within its limits its a great tool, lets us design, say a 10 page website in 2 days, handles the uploads, lets the end user self-maintain the site easily, and has built in e-commerce facilities for those that want them

Over time we've learned to make the tool do a lot of things, but total flexibility would require either a ground-up software rewrite (not likely) or we have do do a lot of customisation, which ends up taking as long as scratch building the site.

We are staring to get into DreamWeaver more and more, and I have scratch built some stuff, but only when the requirement (and the money) is there

joshie76

4:18 pm on Jan 29, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Interesting...

Just changed to 640*480 for fun (it was like being at legoland) and even WmW doesn't fit. It was a good 20% too wide due to the links at the bottom of each thread ('printer friendly version', 'flag this post' etc). Push the text size and things go even more wonky....

Accepted, however, that the WmW audience are probably mostly running at 6400*4200 on 52" wall-mounted plasma screens;)

pgsbs

6:46 pm on Jan 29, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



>>Accepted, however, that the WebmasterWorld audience are probably mostly running at 6400*4200 on 52" wall-mounted plasma screens<<

Well Joshie, guess I should rebuild my site for those plasma screens... Thanx all for the tip, the link to w3schools.com is great!

mivox

6:53 pm on Jan 29, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



The 4% that use Netscape 4.x
The 4% that use 640x480
The 4% that use 256 colours
What is the crossover?

I would guess it's quite high. It's the "haven't upgraded in a few years" set...

Then again, I comfort myself knowing that probably more than 75% of the internet looks strange at 640x480. I try to design everything for 800x600... all of my pages can shrink down to 700 pixels without TOO much trouble, and I try to keep them from looking too strange at 1024. Above 1024, I assume most people are running their browsers at partial screen width. (I run my browser at approx. 2/3 screen width on a 1024 screen most of the time...)

tedster

7:03 pm on Jan 29, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



>> ...not prepared to do 640x480, 256 colors AND Netscape 4.x

A little while ago I visited a prospective client and we viewed my portfolio site in his office. He was running AOL 3 on Windows 3.1

I didn't get the job - he thought my work was ugly.