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Safari + Record… again!

Blogged on February 19, 2008 at 09:29

Record, Safari and W3C

Back in September, I wrote a big post about how the folks down at Record (web version of one of the three major sports print publications — newspapers — in Portugal) had no idea of correct web development. And I said that, and now repeat, not because of the fact that it really doesn’t work at all in Safari, but because of the reason behind why that happens.

Through the largest Apple mailing list in Portugal, I was challenged to try to find some possible solutions for the problem. I invested a few minutes of my time thinking that by doing so, I’d be helping a whole community of users and helping the newspaper company itself. I proceeded to study what was wrong and trying to fix it. Making sure all the code was valid was something I completely set aside so big was the number of errors. I tried focusing on what kind of problems would be causing the disaster that it was viewing the site in Safari.

After a few minutes (not that many), I was surprised to see that it wasn’t that hard to locate the main problems. Basically, the use of height=”100%” on tables rows/columns is a basic “HTML 101″ no-no and it causes Safari to completely loose sense of what the tables (designing with tables is bad enough!) are supposed to look like… Removing the height property for the tables fixed the problem and kept the site viewable on other browsers, just like it was before. There were a few minor issues with some other wrong code, but those were (even more) easily discoverable!

I went on to fixing the .html, emailing the new file to Record and offering myself to help implement in case they needed (which by the look of things in the first place, they probably did/do). This was all done through Pedro Aniceto, after he was asked to challenge some Mac web designers - like this was a Mac issue - into providing possible solutions for the problem (apparently they don’t own Macs at that web design company…).

Today is February 19th. Almost 5 months have gone by. You’d think that such an easy fix would have been implemented. It hasn’t. I have lost complete hope of seeing it implemented. Maybe when they redesign… It’s sad, but unfortunately, not surprising.

As if all of this wasn’t enough, http://record.pt doesn’t even forward to http://www.record.pt… And they aren’t alone on this. A quick try over at many other major websites in Portugal, revealed the same problem. Don’t know the sysadmin of those servers/DNS, but they surely need to learn some more… I guess college classes don’t teach you that… *sigh*

How can this multi-million euro industry hire and maintain such incompetent people? Frustrating… :/

Record.pt + Safari = Get a new WebDesign Firm please…

Blogged on September 28, 2007 at 04:11

This post won’t mean anything to you unless your Portuguese, or live and speak Portuguese and have interest in the sporting life in Portugal.

** Pictures and Video after the break **

Some months ago, every time I wanted to read sports news online, I’d go straight to Record Online (I’m not even going to link them… keep reading to know why!).
Now that I’m away from my beloved country, I subscribed to some news feeds… well, I already had some, but not so many sports-related, since I’d always go for a “bica e ler o jornal” after lunch, and get my daily updates on soccer and sports news there. So I subscribed to Record’s feed on my favorite team (Sporting Clube de Portugal for those who are wondering :p). So yesterday, as I was reading the feeds, a specific one caught my attention and so I proceed to read the full article. I always open a bunch of tabs in the background as I read the feeds, and go back to them after I collected a few to read. To my surprise, my Safari window resized, and showed a pop-up: one of those “You’ve been infected with Virus and Spyware!!” (it included a pseudo-progress bar, like it was actually checking my computer!) For Pete’s sake, a Windows-only app running on my… OS X?? Yeah, sure, I’m gonna buy that now!! WOW

Than the page I go to the page of the article: nothing but the side columns, header and footer… no real content there!! Record’s new website (I don’t know how old it is… just noticed it now) is not only b0rked with spyware fake ads, like the ones you’d expect from pr0n or piracy-related websites (even the “big” ones are more careful to what kind of ads get there!) .

And the design… Oh God!!! Did they pay for that crap??

And thinking Record is one of the best sellers in sports newspapers… I for one will not buy a single issue again when I go back to Portugal, I’ll unsubscribe to it’s feed immediately and recommend everyone to do the same! UNACCEPTABLE!

PS: For those wondering, I do have Safari 3.0 with popup block activated and even SafariBlock which is an “AdBlock”-like plugin that works great! And I did try the same website with WebKit, just to see if the content would appear. And with Firefox, then content does show up, but also do the popup ads…

PS2: If you think “Oh, I have AdBlock+ and I’m not getting those ads or popups” you should consider that most people are using Internet Explorer with no ad blocking system installed, and might just believe the “story” does ads present them!

Like I said: U.N.A.C.C.E.P.T.A.B.L.E

PS: I made a little video to show how the page looks in Safari, and took some snapshots of the “ads” that pop’ed up! Click “More” to see them!

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