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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Prototyping New Responsive Mobile for UNIX.COM - Phase III Post 303008297 by Neo on Thursday 30th of November 2017 01:51:08 AM
Old 11-30-2017
Prototyping New Responsive Mobile for UNIX.COM - Phase III

From Prototyping New Responsive Mobile for UNIX.COM - Phase II, we move to Phase III.

Basically, the core prototype for every day browsing the forums, replying, posting and editing on mobile is nearly finished with the exception of a few formatting issues with regard to rare system messages or less obvious pages which need a bit of formatting to match the new style. I have done all my personal testing on the iPhone 6s and iPhone6+.

In phase three, I plan to work on Javascript sliders for page navigation so we can slide back and forth with gestures on mobile versus clicking to advance to the next page in long threads with many posts or forum views of many pages of discussion threads. Also, in Phase III I plan to fix bugs and correct formatting errors and add any pages (port to mobile) that members really want. Considering most all users prefer desktop because it's easier to prototype code on the desktop (by far), mobile is mostly for reading and catching up on the go or making a quick reply which does not require coding.

Status: Mobile usage is slowing increasing, day-by-day, week-by-week, since the new mobile prototype changes. Google shows nearly 100% "mobile friendly" for all indexed pages, currently over 1,000,000. However, I have "forced" this in some cases and there is a bit more work to be done in the long term (99% of mobile users will not notice this).

At this point in the prototype development, I would like to encourage all users who have mobile phones to visit the forums on mobile from time to time, try out all the new icons and buttons, read (and reply) and comment in this thread.

All comments, even negative or harsh are OK. Praise is also appreciated as it was a lot of work to get this code to this stage.

Please keep in mind that the mobile version is not meant to have the richness of the desktop version. The mobile version does not have editor buttons for code tags (yet) and other nice to have editor or moderating features. Code tags need to be written by hand "[code]" and "[/code] for example . For me, this is no problem at all, but for people who are new members and not familiar with how to write out these tags (often quicker than using prefab buttons), it's not perfect yet. I will this fix in the future as usage goes up.

So, please visit with mobile from time to time, when you are on the go, or relaxing away from your desktop or notebook, and if you see any bugs, formatting issues, or would just like to suggest some features, please do so now before I enter into development Phase III of this "mobile prototype" project.

Thank you.

PS: All Tapatalk support has been disabled and delated, permanently.
 

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GSMPB(8)						      System Manager's Manual							  GSMPB(8)

NAME
gsmpb - GSM mobile phone phonebook manipulation program SYNOPSIS
gsmpb [ -b baudrate ] [ --baudrate baudrate ] [ -c ] [ --copy ] [ -d destination device or file ] [ --destination destination device or file ] [ -h ] [ --help ] [ -i ] [ --index ] [ -I init string ] [ --init init string ] [ -p phonebook name ] [ --phonebook phonebook name ] [ -s source device or file ] [ --source source device or file ] [ -t character set ] [ --charset character set ] [ -v ] [ --version ] [ -V ] [ --verbose ] [ -X ] [ --xonxoff ] [ -y ] [ --synchronize ] DESCRIPTION
gsmpb can store or retrieve phonebook entries residing in a GSM mobile phone's phonebook to or from a file. A synchronization mode is also available. gsmpb reads entries from the source which can be a mobile phone (if a serial device file is given) or a file (if a file name is given). The source is never modified. gsmpb writes phonebook entries to a destination file or device. Depending on the mode the source is copied to the destination file, thus overwriting the destination, or the destination is synchronized with regard to the source which is the default (details see below). If "-" is given as the parameter for the --source or --destination options, the phonebook is read from standard input and/or written to standard output, respectively. Phonebook entries names are encoded using the GSM default alphabet in the mobile phone, whereas they are stored using the Latin-1 encoding in phonebook files. When reading phonebook entries from a mobile phone entry names are converted from the GSM default to Latin-1. Charac- ters that can not be converted to Latin-1 are encoded as character code 172 (Latin-1 boolean "not"). When writing file-based phonebook entries to a mobile phone a conversion to the GSM default alphabet takes place. Characters that can not be converted are encoded as GSM delta (code 16). If the default character set has been changed using the --charset option no conversion takes place. Error messages are printed to the standard error output. If the program terminates on error the error code 1 is returned. OPTIONS
-b baudrate, --baudrate baudrate The baud rate to use. The default baudrate is 38400. -c, --copy This causes the contents of the source to be copied to the destination. After this operation the destination has exactly the same contents as the source. -d destination, --destination destination The destination device or file. -h, --help Prints an option summary. -I init string, --init init string Initialization string to send to the TA (default: "E0"). Note that the sequence "ATZ" is sent first. -i, --index If the index position is given, gsmpb preserves the assignment of entries to memory slots in the mobile phone's phonebook. This can be used to backup phonebook entries with their position into a phonebook file or to change the position of entries by editing a phonebook file and writing them back to the mobile phone. If this option is given the phonebook file used as the source must con- tain indices for every entry. Additionally, these indices must be unique, ie. it is not allowed to assign one entry twice to a spe- cific position in the mobile phone's phonebook. -p phonebook, --phonebook phonebook The name of the phonebook to read from or write to. This is only used for device sources and destinations. Commonly available phone- books are: FD SIM fixdialling-phonebook LD SIM last-dialling-phonebook ME ME phonebook MT combined ME and SIM phonebook SM SIM phonebook TA TA phonebook -s source, --source source The source device or file. -t character set, --charset character set Set the character set to use for phonebook operations (default is the GSM default alphabet). -v, --version Prints the program version. -V, --verbose Prints out a detailed progress report. -X, --xonxoff Uses software handshaking (XON/XOFF) for accessing the device. -y, --synchronize This causes the contents of the source to be synchronized with the destination (default). Synchronization in this con- text means: - If the source contains an entry with a name that does not exist in the destination this entry is added to the desti- nation. - If the source contains an entry with a name that can also be found in the destination, the entry in the destination is overwritten (ie. the telephone number is updated). Exception: More then one entry with the name exists in the destination. In this case the new entry ist just added. - Entries in the destination that do not exist in the source are deleted. Note that synchronization has the following properties that differ from copying: This algorithm does not change the location of unchanged entries in the destination phonebook. The synchronization function is not case-sensitive when comparing names. PHONEBOOK FILE FORMAT
Phonebook entries are stored in phonebook files that are meant to be human-readable and -editable. There is one phonebook entry per line, and each line has the format: index|text|phone number The fields have the following meanings: index The index of the entry which must be a positive number. The index may also be empty. Indices can be used in conjunction with the --index option to store the entry into a specific position in the mobile phone. text Descriptive text for the entry. The text may con- tain the special characters '', '|', carriage return (ASCII code 13), or line feed (ASCII code 10). These must be written "\", "|", " ", " ", respectively. The text should only contain charac- ters that can be encoded using the GSM default alphabet (see comments above). phone number Phone numbers can only contains the digits 0-9 and the '+' sign. A '+' sign denotes an international number. EXAMPLES
The following invocation of gsmpb synchronizes the mobile phone's SIM phonebook with the file $HOME/.phonebook: gsmpb --synchronize -b 19200 -d /dev/mobilephone -s $HOME/.phonebook -p "SM" AUTHOR
Peter Hofmann <software@pxh.de> BUGS
Report bugs to software@pxh.de. Include a complete, self- contained example that will allow the bug to be repro- duced, and say which version of gsmpb you are using. COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 1999 Peter Hofmann gsmpb is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Pub- lic License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) any later version. gsmpb is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied war- ranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PUR- POSE. See the GNU Library General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public License along with gsmpb; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the Free Software Foundation, 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. SEE ALSO
gsminfo(7), gsmctl(1), gsmsendsms(1), gsmsmsd(8), gsmsms- store(1). gsmpb v1.10 Sat Jun 16 22:10:00 UTC 2012 GSMPB(8)
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