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These sites were visited from November 29 to December 4, 1999
Users of palmtops, handhelds, pagers, and other Web access tools face websites that may be cluttered or non-functional. Refer to the Executive/Mobile Access section of this report for more information.
Here is how the nine candidates fared on the screens of Palm V users, through the ProxiWeb 3.5 browser.
Gary Bauer. The brochureware images break up into incomprehensible fragments (d). Bauer site evaluation summary.
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Bill Bradley. The frame can be exited to arrive at the text, which appears quickly (d). Bradley site evaluation summary.
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Pat Buchanan. What's disorganized in Lynx looks good on the Palm (d). Buchanan site evaluation summary.
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George W. Bush. It takes more than a dozen screens to get to the text (d). Bush site evaluation summary.
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Steve Forbes. Several screens are needed to get to the text, which then has some complete links (d). Forbes site evaluation summary.
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Al Gore. The right-hand navigation puts the text in an effective position near the top and in the first screen (d). Gore site evaluation summary.
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Orrin Hatch. The message is lost in the fundraising, demanding another link out (d). Hatch site evaluation summary.
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Alan Keyes. The home page links on this site don't function in the proxy, and it takes effort to get out of loops (d). Keyes site evaluation summary.
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John McCain. The frames can be exited to arrive at the graphical site map (d). McCain site evaluation summary.
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