

Those old phone operating systems that the default SharePoint experience was designed for are really a no show here. These metrics drill in on traffic over the last year. Surprised? What I was explaining above is that it apparently was tough to anticipate the dominance of smart phones. This is a breakdown of the mobile operating systems. Here’s a line to add to the meta tags that will support the auto zoom. He discusses adding icons for adding it to your phone, and a bunch of other stuff.

Interesting that Scott Hanselman provided some assistance to people trying to make their sites more mobile friendly.Here’s more information for developers that want to see what other options they have once they sniff the mobile client:
#SHAREPLUS IPAD APP CODE#
This code snippet below makes it a rich browsing experience for your iphone, ipad, wp7, blackberry, etc…Īdd the XML code snippet to your web.config file on each web front end. We recently launched the site and quickly realized we forgot to turn off the default mobile redirect. 99% of SharePoint environments should make this simple change to your web.config files to make the mobile experience rich. Yes, I’m being a bit harsh, but this is more as a warning that you should pay attention. Unfortunately as key as the mobile revolution has been to Intranet and web based applications, Microsoft didn’t take the opportunity to focus on building interfaces for the rich mobile phones and instead made investments to slightly improve the legacy phone experience. It’s been low hanging fruit for making the experience better with apps. Was it a waste? Well not according to all of mobile apps out there.

SharePoint 2010 inherited the mobile interface that was built in SharePoint 2007, and it was improved slightly for publishing sites in SharePoint 2010, and a whole SDK was built for mobile.
#SHAREPLUS IPAD APP WINDOWS#
Instead, by default, an iPad or iPhone, Windows Phone 7, Android, and even Blackberry… yes essentially all your rich mobile phones have a degraded user experience. In my mind if they would have kept the capability for mobile as an alternative and left the default experience alone things would be much better. A legacy design decision was made for SharePoint 2010’s that creates a poor default mobile smart phone experience. You may have deployed SharePoint and had a complaint from a mobile user, by default the experience isn’t great.
