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Tablet users push BBC to go ‘responsive’

On March 23, BBC will unveil its new website.

The reason for the change: More and more users are accessing BBC on their tablets and mobiles.

The BBC therefore does not want to be stuck in the old “computer” era, and has decided to turn “responsive”

You will now see a BBC website customised for your device from Monday onwards. The code has been rewritten, and BBC will switch to a single database from where content will be broadcast to all devices – in a format that best suits them.

Mobile users will not notice the change, because BBC had adapted to mobile phones much earlier. It is the tablet users who will find the BBC site displaying better on their screens.

This is how the BBC Home page will look on different devices.

 

BBC editors are also using the opportunity to “clean house” – that is to make the site visually more pleasing. However, the changes are cosmetic in nature. They are not radical.

BBC had unrolled the beta version of its “responsive” website last December to get viewer feedback.  Niko Vijayaratnam, BBC’s Senior Product Manager, in a blogpost identifies the changes based on user feedback as:

 The colour of the summary font was felt to be too light so we have used a darker colour now.

The ‘ticker’ was important to you so we have introduced an updated version which now displays across all pages when there is a new breaking news alert instead of just on the front page

You wanted to be able to access the ‘Have Your Say’ section easily so we’ve added a ‘Share with BBC News’ link on all the section pages which will take you to this section.

A few things that have remained the same are:

The most noticeable changes are:

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