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Request desktop site blocked by IPhone 13

In Safari and Firefox and edge you can use the setting but IPhone 13 blocks it and I just get the mobile site. Example is website nasa for James Webb telescope

Posted on Jan 8, 2022 1:38 PM

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Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Jan 30, 2022 8:29 AM

Request Desktop is a “REQUEST” to the site to show the desktop version of the site. It is a REQUEST. The site doesn’t have to honor it. Most sites today are coded to be “responsive”, meaning that they adjust the display to fit the dimensions of the user’s screen; they don’t really have a separate “desktop version”. When you visit a site your browser tells the site the dimensions of your screen; a responsive site uses this information to decide what to display to you, whether you requested mobile or desktop. Back when desktop and mobile versions existed they had different URLs, usually like “website.com” and “m.website.com” or “website.com/m”, but for almost any professional site these distinctions no longer exist. As an example of responsive design, I just tried nytimes.com. When I switched to the “desktop version” it briefly displayed a wide view, then a second later switched to a view appropriate for my iPhone.



18 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Jan 30, 2022 8:29 AM in response to toine144

Request Desktop is a “REQUEST” to the site to show the desktop version of the site. It is a REQUEST. The site doesn’t have to honor it. Most sites today are coded to be “responsive”, meaning that they adjust the display to fit the dimensions of the user’s screen; they don’t really have a separate “desktop version”. When you visit a site your browser tells the site the dimensions of your screen; a responsive site uses this information to decide what to display to you, whether you requested mobile or desktop. Back when desktop and mobile versions existed they had different URLs, usually like “website.com” and “m.website.com” or “website.com/m”, but for almost any professional site these distinctions no longer exist. As an example of responsive design, I just tried nytimes.com. When I switched to the “desktop version” it briefly displayed a wide view, then a second later switched to a view appropriate for my iPhone.



Jan 10, 2022 9:35 AM in response to toine144

Do you find it surprising that a desktop device like a laptop gets a desktop view of a website??


Your argument now has two logical inconsistencies.

  1. that iphone always blocks desktop views l, even though Google.com and some other sites will display on iphone
  2. A desktop device shows desktop view of the blocked sites so that proves it.

I am no longer following this ridiculous argument.

Jan 9, 2022 2:40 AM in response to sberman

Thanks for your reply. But I tried this and not only in Safari. It does not work because iPhone blocked it. It does not work in Safari and in Firefox and in Edge. Somehow the command use desktop site is blocked. I tried many sites which DO have full site (I prefer to have everything) and have partial site (mobile site). At some website’s like google the IPhone allows it but most sites it is blocked.

Jan 10, 2022 9:47 AM in response to toine144

I just tested it with about a dozen websites. All of them switched to the desktop site. I also tried nasa.gov. It switched back and forth, but the desktop image on an iPhone is the same as the mobile image. That is a choice of the website designers. The ability to customize the display to the device is called “responsive design” or a responsive site.

Jan 17, 2022 8:48 AM in response to Lawrence Finch

Exactly with nasa.gov it s both the same but if you open it on your computer you will see it differs from the safari. But not much. The website I always use for news www.nos.nl (Iphone 13 does not allow desktop view in Safari, Edge or Firefox). Normally at desktop view it will present you the site exactly as it would show on your








[Link Edited by Moderator]





Jan 17, 2022 8:59 AM in response to LD150

https://webb.nasa.gov/content/webbLaunch/whereIsWebb.html

The difference between the desktop view and the mobile website is the time line bar which has less information than the desktop view. At the desktop view it has the text "Early deployment" and "Sunshield" and "Secondary Mirror" and "Primary Mirror" and "Mirror Segments" and "L2 Insertion". It maybe a coincidence that Safari, Firefox and Edge all have this.

Jan 30, 2022 5:50 AM in response to toine144

I found the reason why this bug (not reacting on Request Desktop site). Every browser is FORCED to use some code from Apple in their browser. In this case it is clear that the part "Request Desktop site" is in that part because every browser has this problem.


Before anyone here says it is not I tested this also on Windows computer and Android phone. Some sites like apple, google, amazon will respond ok but the majority will not.


So to Apple please update your software so that every site will respond properly to the "Request desktop site"

Request desktop site blocked by IPhone 13

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