A lot of clients today who outsource their web development projects are very aware of the latest industry trends. They already know, which ones are great browsers and they have requirements that their sites should work across all browsers. For a web development company , it’s always a challenge to make their web development standout equally across all standard/most used/ most preferred browsers and across browsers in mobile / tablet devices. The way to do this is by using responsive web design.
There is continuous effort by the css web design team – including the css developer or css programmer - to make sure the websites they build are compatible across browsers. The html CSS developer implements the latest CSS tools that are available today, like RGBa colour layer elements, border-radius, rounded corners (the current favorite for every good web designer and web developer ), generated gradients and all possible new cases in CSS.
Typically, on the clients end, you will have more than one person reviewing the work being produced, whether it is mockups, actual production ready websites, or others. And they tend to use their own laptops or workstations with their favorite browsers on them. So it is critical for the web developer to make sure even the initial mockups are not as pixel perfect files, but it should be done using CSS web design to render their designs on browsers. Such responsive web design helps the end clients to see what they are actually going to get as compared to flat mockups.
In one case, a client checked the initial mockup in Firefox and he liked what he saw on his browser. At the same time another associate of the client checked it on her laptop (having internet explorer 7) and even she liked what she saw. Hence, the initial mockup was signed off and the development got a go ahead immediately.
So, when the design was presented to both of them, it was done as a responsive web design in html and css. And they saw it on their respective browsers not as a picture of the mockup (which would set some false expectations), but as the final page for that individual browser.
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