The phone vendors should support not telling the websites you're on mobile. I know they can guess based on resolution and such, but there should be a setting to lie and simulate a desktop. You can't rely on every single website not being run by jerks, but you should be able to buy a phone from a company that cares more about its customers than random jerks.
jakub_g|4 months ago
For example I use Opera to browse `facebook.com/messages`. It's a bad UX for writing (somehow it "swallows" some of the written text when you type too fast, or select text and try to overwrite it), but this makes me use it less. Won't ever install FB app on my phone.
Andrex|4 months ago
I was literally using it fine one day, then the next they started saying I need to use the desktop website for menu editing as it's "more optimized."
Dinguses, if I'm manually turning on Desktop Mode I know it's not gonna be "optimized." Just let me get my menu edits pushed goddamnit!
badc0ffee|4 months ago
musicale|4 months ago
Surely you don't mean to block our popups, right?
Surely you didn't mean to block our auto-playing video, right?
Surely you would rather use our lousy app rather than the desktop web site you explicitly requested, right?
etc.
slumberlust|4 months ago
crooked-v|4 months ago
ksymph|4 months ago
cm2012|4 months ago
swiftcoder|4 months ago
janwl|4 months ago
SllX|4 months ago
Also Wikipedia. I don't remember if I particularly disliked the first-party app, but I vastly prefer Wikipedia in a web browser.
xandrius|4 months ago
If you want full fooling, install a UA changer on your Firefox mobile, and you're laughing.
reaperducer|4 months ago
Apple has started down this road. All iPads now use desktop user agents.
thaumasiotes|4 months ago
The browser vendors already do. What do you want to change?
dripton|4 months ago
SamBam|4 months ago
Firefox on Android seems pretty good on desktop-mode, though: its resolution seems desktop-like, and sites rarely give me the mobile treatment.