Mr Hunt, with help from Mr Blanc, has been busy minting an icon for your iPhone:
Most people have Mint in a subdirectory like /mint. This is a problem if you want to set an iPhone favicon for your root domain but change the favicon in subdirectories. This is because the iPhone looks in the root directory for the icon. That is, unless you tell it different.
I watched the idea bounce back-and-forth over twitter and then realised how a) twitter allows for such free form conversations and b) how the iPhone has become such an integral, every-day part of peoples lives.
≡ This is a brief remainders entry relating to the topics of howto, iphone, links and written in response to an external article, comment or opinion — refer linked article for completeness and context.
Brendan Borlase is a Systems and Network Administrator living in Adelaide, Australia, having lived, worked and breathed Information Technology for over 12 years. Learn more.
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