![]() And best of all it doesn't require installation of the iPhone SDK.Ĭertainly you'd want to do at least one pass on an actual iPhone, but during most of the development cycle, having a quick and easy way to check how your website looks on mobile Safari, makes these simulators worth adding to your tester toolbox. And by having a tool that simulates the iPhone running on the same system with desktop browsers, you can view web page rendering side-by-side. Hence testers need to add mobile Safari to the browser compatibility test matrix. With iPhones accounting for most of the US mobile browser web traffic, website developers need to pay attention to how their pages look on mobile Safari. To run the Air iPhone, you will need the Adobe Air framework that will recreate the iPhone’s GUI on the Windows platform. Air iPhone is an alternate iOS simulator for Windows which is useful in replicating the iPhone’s graphical user interface. But I think it and others like it ( iPhoney: iPhone web simulator) can still be of service for browser compatibility testing. Air iPhone Emulator for Windows 10, 7 & 8. Anyone who dislikes this does not know the difference between a SIMULATOR and EMULATOR. ![]() Now that the SDK is out, which provides a full blown simulator (with some limitation), this free online tool would seem to be obsolete. It's intended use was to test iPhone web apps prior to the advent of native apps. The image on the left is a view of yesterday's article on USB 3.0 and was produced by, a clever web-based tool for testing content as it would appear on the iPhone.
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