At Appeal Web Design we strongly believe in web standards. Every website we build is designed for multiple types of Web browsers--to provide trouble-free access to the widest possible audience. The World Wide Web is a multi-platform, non-browser specific medium. It should not matter whether people browse your Web pages using Netscape, Explorer, Opera, Lynx, WebTV, NetPhonic's Web-On-Call, Mobile Telephones, or Personal Digital Assistants (PDAs, or palmtops, the little computers with screens the size of a credit card). Each browser ought to render your informational Web pages without problems. If a Web page is designed properly, blind individuals, or anyone using text-to-voice or Braille displays, can easily listen to and review your work.
Click on an icon to validate our work.![]()

Creating Valid Web Pages
Every webpage that we create is run through the W3c validator to test their compliance with common HTML (Hypertext Markup Language) specifications. We modify pages until they validate, because compliant pages have a better chance of being rendered by various Web browsers, and be properly indexed by Search Engines. However, if you intend something that is impractical with HTML, it will be no less impractical for being syntactically valid. We work with the strengths of HTML rather than trying to batter it into a WYSIWYG page design system (WYSIWYG stands for What You See Is What You Get.) or using a template. Go ahead and check our web pages they will all validate.
About the Appeal Web Design Website
- This site uses Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) for its visual layout. This allows us to separate our content from its presentation, decrease page load times, increase readability on all browsers and devices (PDAs, Phones, etc.) and make the site easier to maintain.
- If your browser or browsing device does not support stylesheets at all, the content of each page is still readable.
- Page sizing: At the top right of each page are two sizing buttons. Use these to adjust the page size of the content on the page. Your selection will be remembered on future visits by storing a cookie. If you are using a small screen resolution this will not have much affect on your view.
