On 23rd February the first ever Responsive Summit takes place in London. Thinkers and do-ers in the field of responsive web design get around a table to discuss how to make this easier for all of us.
This I can guarantee will enhance how we build sites in the coming years. Some of the questions I have are:
How we can serve up the right images for the right device?
Because of the responsive nature, images usually have to be created larger to compensate. I am wary of this because there have been discussions about increased page bloat and serving up multiple versions.
Further reading:
Is there still a place for ‘mobile’ versions of websites?
With the emergence of responsive and adaptive designs, do ‘mobile’ versions still have a place on the web?
How do we ‘sell’ responsive design to clients?
This is of course, down to the agencies and salespeople themselves. High profile responsive sites, such as http://bostonglobe.com/ have helped, but clients still need to be educated. That is our job.
There is, naturally a slightly higher cost to designing responsive sites, but this is minimal and when compared to separate desktop and mobile versions is usually a lot more cost effective.
How do we present responsive designs to the client?
Designs are typically served up in visual format, most proabably created in Photoshop or Illustrator first. Is there a good way of presenting these to the client whilst conveying the concept? Which leads on to…
Are we going to abandon Photoshop?
Is Photoshop even the right tool to design nowadays. With frameworks and tools available to create demos relatively quickly will this be the standard in the coming years?
Should we still be designing in pixels?
With the emergence of the retina display iPad and multiple resolution devices, have pixels had their day? Has the concept of pixel-perfect designs gone in favour of percentage and em-based designs?
Any other questions?
You can submit your own questions before the discussion takes place on the 23rd Feb by going to the website http://responsivesummit.com/.