Is Mobile Website Design Going The Way of Hidden Text?

You might remember the days of hidden text on the Internet — it was one of the earliest forms of black hat website SEO. Webmasters would want their site to rank highly for a pile of keywords, so they’d just copy the keyword and several similar phrases dozens of times each and make the text color the same as the background color, so human eyes never saw it (unless you hit Control A). The search engines of a decade ago ate that stuff up. Then along came Google and they killed it as swiftly and surely as Seal Team Six killed Osama Bin Laden.

So what does this have to do with mobile website design? Simple — some experts are starting to think that mobile website design will soon be a dead art, like speaking in Latin or giving your own car a tune-up.

Mobile website design exploded with the creation of the iPhone and other similar web-capable smartphones. Such devices couldn’t quite handle a normal website, so a special language was developed that displayed the mobile version of a page if it was informed that the page was being accessed by a mobile device. The mobile version of the page had fewer pictures, less media to load, and was generally stripped down.

(In a comedic twist, at one point the web browser Opera was being used in so many devices that many webpages always showed Opera users the mobile version of a page, even if they were actually on a standard computer. That caused a lot of chaos until it got sorted out.)

The problem, of course, is that now as we move boldly forward into the realm of the 5G phone networks and mobile devices that can handle all of the pictures and media of a normal webpage, the need for special mobile pages is fading quickly. On the other hand, however, there are a lot of people who don’t have one of these new omnicapable devices — heck, there are people out there who are still fighting getting even one of those super cheap Jitterbug cell phones. So it’s safe to say that while mobile website design might be losing a little bit of importance, it will still have a place for years to come.

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