1) How do I tell the site to serve the "styles_mobile.css" sheet to mobile traffic? Is there a most commonly used piece of code for this?
You can use link stylesheets that have media queries in them:
<link rel="stylesheet" media="only screen and (max-width: 480px)" href="mobile.css">
2) I have an index page and am creating a new mobile one: "/index_mobile.htm" is that "wrong". Should the mobile page be it's own entity (e.g. /mobile.htm) or based of the existing index page? How do I redirect it? How do I create the address "m.mywebsiteaddress.com"
The other option is to serve one page (index.html) and just start stacking floated elements on top of one another as the viewing area shrinks. View http://www.html5rocks.com/en/ in both your desktop and on your phone. Or, if your phone is not near you at the moment, simply resize your browser and watch as the site starts getting rid of multiple columns and creates a one-column view. They are only serving one file (i.e. index.html) and not redirecting mobile users to a mobile page (i.e. mobile.html).
3) Currently I am making edits on my laptop and then to see what they look like am having to upload them to my ISP to see the effects of my edits on my iphone - how do I do this straight from my Mac?
Install Apache Server on your Mac, do a port forward on the proper ports (ports 80 and 8080 IIRC), and you'll be able to view the pages on your phone without having to constantly upload the files to an ISP. The URL will be (http://xx.xxx.xx.xx) or something similar to it.
4) s there a standard structure wrt html elements? E.g. a standard doc has html, head and body elements. HTML5 now has header, nav and footer elements - are there any mobi specific ones I should be aware off?
No, mobile browsers render the same HTML tags as desktop browsers. The one thing you should consider doing is using the HTML5 doctype (which mobile browsers support) because I've had a LOT of trouble getting "mobified" websites using XHTML or HTML4 doctypes to look OK in mobile browsers even when using the viewport meta tag as the sites would look extremely zoomed out.
Here's by far the best resource I've stumbled upon in regards to mobile web development.
http://www.html5rocks.com/en/mobile/mobifying/