Browser Compatibility
This website has been tested in Firefox 2.0.0.14, Internet Explorer 7, Safari 3.1.1 and Opera 9.27, and works more or less the same in each.
It should be noted that only one version of this website is delivered to all devices used to view it, and aside from browser/device specific CSS, it is up to the user-agent in question to determine how to display the content.
As a rule, this website should work in any modern browser that supports (X)HTML and the CSS 2.0 spec. And, at its most basic, should work in any browser capable of parsing (X)HTML, assuming either no CSS support or full CSS support (though, like all things, this isn't an ideal world, and as such, most browsers have partial CSS suport, which makes it difficult to determine which browser will work and which will not).
This site does utilise one more advanced feature, in that a :hover attribute has been attached to something that's not a link. This should be fine in all but the oldest browsers, with the only potential issues to be seen in Internet Explorer, to this end, Dean Edwards' IE7 script has been implemented to help make sure that the site will work in IE too.
Notes
If you've been directed here from the home page because you have javascript disabled, then please note that this site uses javascript for 'full view' display of images (via the use of Mootools and Smoothbox) and to display the compatibility and legal pages (under normal circumstances, the page should be all inclusive).
To ensure that this site is viewed 'the way the director intended', Javascript has to be enabled.
In order to ensure compatibility in Internet Explorer 6 (which has finicky support at best), I have utilised the IE7 script created by Dean Edwards which helps to remove the most serious of kinks that can be found in Internet Explorer, though, of course, it doesn't fix the numerous kinks to be found in Internet Explorer 7.
FAQ
No questions have been asked, and there isn't anything on this website that really needs explaining, at the moment, so this will remain empty until someone asks a question, or when I find something that may need further explaining.