+++ WEB DESIGN UPDATE. - Volume 6, Issue 06, August 2, 2007. An email newsletter to distribute news and information about web design and development. ++ISSUE 06 CONTENTS. SECTION ONE: New references. What's new at the Web Design Reference site? http://www.d.umn.edu/goto/webdesign/ New links in these categories: 01: ACCESSIBILITY. 02: CASCADING STYLE SHEETS. 03: DREAMWEAVER. 04: EVALUATION & TESTING. 05: EVENTS. 06: MISCELLANEOUS. 07: STANDARDS, GUIDELINES & PATTERNS. 08: TOOLS. 09: TYPOGRAPHY. 10: USABILITY. 11: XML. SECTION TWO: 12: What Can You Find at the Web Design Reference Site? [Contents ends.] ++ SECTION ONE: New references. +01: ACCESSIBILITY. Get Faculty and Staff Involved in Accessibility Testing By Alan Parks. "How can campus leaders make certain all users of their Web sites have full access to benefit from the content?..." http://tinyurl.com/yvgjmd Overcoming the Challenge of Podcast Transcription By Henny Swan. "...for some of us listening to podcasts it is not an option. If you're deaf, hard of hearing, deaf-blind, do not have a sound card or speakers you'll be locked out of content if it is only provided in audio format. Not only that so too will search engines. The guidance therefore, according to the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines, is to provide a transcript of what's being said. But here's where the problem starts. Some of you may have noticed I have been promising for some time now a transcript of Shawn Henry's presentation on WCAG 2.0 that RNIB hosted in June. This has proven a trickier promise to meet than I first anticipated and through conversations with other people it's clear that I'm not the only one finding it difficult to get a quality transcript from an audio file. So here are some tips to help you on the way when you're looking at getting a transcript for a podcast.." http://tinyurl.com/2hew7u Confirming a Web Site's Accessibility By Mike Cherim. "You know why web accessibility makes sense and understand the benefits. Because of this you've made your web site so it's valid and compliant with current web standards. You've tried your best to use semantic mark-up and all that which gets poured into the very foundation of a quality web site. You're pretty sure you've removed the barriers to accessibility and that any functionality is a progressive enhancement. But you're human, and you know in your heart, deep down inside, that you're not infallible. So what do you do? How do you launch your site knowing with absolute confidence you've done a good job?..." http://accessites.org/site/2007/07/confirming-a-web-sites-accessibility/ Too Much Accessibility - Double Expanded Acronyms By Bim Egan. "...where you're providing the expansion in plain text, avoid the temptation to use ACRONYM or ABBR to expand the initials that immediately precede or follow it." http://tinyurl.com/2hhqsc +02: CASCADING STYLE SHEETS. CSS Specificity: Things You Should Know By Vitaly Friedman and Sven Lennartz. "Apart from Floats, the CSS Specificity is one of the most difficult concepts to grasp in Cascading Stylesheets. The different weight of selectors is usually the reason why your CSS-rules don't apply to some elements, although you think they should have. In order to minimize the time for bug hunting you need to understand, how browsers interpret your code. And to understand that, you need to have a firm understanding on how specificity works. In most cases such problems are caused by the simple fact that somewhere among your CSS-rules you've defined a more specific selector. CSS Specificity isn't simple. However, there are methods to explain it in a simple and intuitive way. And that's what this article is all about. You'll understand the concept if you love Star Wars. Really..." http://tinyurl.com/yuyoex CSS Q.Tabs By Al Sparber. "Have you ever wanted to make simple and accessible navigation bars that were pure text but displayed as scalable graphical tabs with hover effects that behaved like image rollovers? We did too. So we wrote this tutorial. Before you begin, take a look at the finished Q.Tabs..." http://www.projectseven.com/tutorials/css/qtabs/ +03: DREAMWEAVER. Dreamweaver for Ajax...Should We Take it Serious Again? By Dion Almaer. "...I thought I should put a survey up so we can all see what the community is up too..." http://tinyurl.com/yqhwom +04: EVALUATION & TESTING. Embracing the Un-Science of Qualitative Research Part One - Small Sample Sizes are Super By Leisa Reichelt. "If you're into qualitative research at all, it wouldn't have taken long before you had someone ask you about the statistical significance of your research and how you could back your findings with such a small sample size, or to find others out there trying to make qualitative research look more scientific by trying to extract hard data from it. There are three main ways that you can try to make qualitative research look more scientific..." http://tinyurl.com/ypknps Embracing the Un-Science of Qualitative Research Part Two - Ever-Evolving Prototypes are Ace By Leisa Reichelt. "...Qualitative research, on the other hand, is not about numbers so much. It is about the depth of insight that you can gain from having much greater and more flexible access to your research subjects. As you are seeking insight, not statistics, it matters far less whether whatever you are testing, say a prototype, changes a bit throughout the course of the study. In my experience, some of the most fruitful research has occurred when the prototype has changed quite a bit from interview to interview - and sometimes even within an interview. Here's how it works..." http://tinyurl.com/2cvrxz Asking the Right Questions By Rostislav Raykov. "When testing people in front of the computer screen, you need to guide them in some way through the process...The questions must be on point and must be easily related to the tester..." http://am-use.com/asking-the-right-questions/ +05: EVENTS. Presenting Data and Information with Edward Tufte August 23 or 24, 2007 in Chicago, Illinois, U.S.A. August 28 or 29, 2007 in Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S.A. http://www.edwardtufte.com/tufte/courses Don't Make Me Think: The Workshop with Steve Krug September 20, 2007, in Chicago, Illinois, U.S.A. October 26, 2007, in Seattle, Washington, U.S.A. November 16, 2007, in Washington, D.C., U.S.A. http://www.sensible.com/workshops.html Information Architecture Seminar with Louis Rosenfeld September 21, 2007, in Chicago, Illinois, U.S.A. October 25, 2007, in Seattle, Washington, U.S.A. November 15, 2007, in Washington, D.C., U.S.A. http://louisrosenfeld.com/presentations/seminars/eia/ +06: MISCELLANEOUS. Documentation. Make it happen. By Colin Lieberman. "The desktop software industry knows all about documentation. But in the web shops where I've worked, documentation is a dirty word..." http://www.cactusflower.org/documentation-making-it-happen Debunking the Myths of Innovation: An Interview with Scott Berkun By Christine Perfetti. "In his research, Scott Berkun, the author of the popular new book, "The Myths of Innovation," has done a fantastic job of demystifying innovation and debunking dangerous assumptions about how breakthroughs happen. UIE's Christine Perfetti recently had the chance to talk with Scott about his new book and his research in the area of innovation..." http://www.uie.com/articles/myths_of_innovation/ +07: STANDARDS, GUIDELINES & PATTERNS. Formal Recorded Complaint By John Foliot. "Mr. Bratt, Mr. Berners-Lee, Ms. Brewer, Mr. Connolly, I am writing today regarding an issue that both shocks and profoundly disappoints me...Today, transcripts of the HTML5 Working Groups IRC discussion serve to illustrate how insensitive and antagonistic these authors are, and how their whole attitude towards the goals of web accessibility appear to be marginalized and trivialized. While comments drifted in and out, I would point you to http://krijnhoetmer.nl/irc-logs/whatwg/20070701#l-225 as a place to start, and read through to (and slightly past) the section regarding 'smell-o-vision', and the comments regarding people who lack a sense of smell. While these may be seen as simply innocuous, 'private' comments, the fact that they are publicly recorded and associated to the HTML-WG should be of concern..." http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-html/2007Jul/1044.html Web Standards Do - the Way of Web Standards By Olivier Thereau. "One of the things which made the web so popular since its first days was its easy access: HTML was simple. Anyone could write a web page. This is still true, to some extent, and thanks to a number of Web Authoring tools, or services such as Wikis, Blog software and CMSes, anyone can create a Web Page. But the Web technologies got richer: CSS, scripting, the DOM, SVG, widgets... From this increased richness and complexity rose a new group of people: the Web Professionals..." http://www.w3.org/QA/2007/07/the_way_of_web_standards.html Microformats: More Meaning from Your Markup By Brian Suda. "You've probably heard the term 'microformat' and assumed it to be part of some Web 2.0 flash-in-the-pan movement. But 'microformat' is not just a fancy name or trademark - it's part of a much bigger picture. So, what are microformats?..." http://www.sitepoint.com/article/microformats-meaning-markup +08: TOOLS. XRAY By John Allsopp. "XRAY is a bookmarklet for Safari, Firefox, Camino or Mozilla. Use it to see the box model for any element." http://westciv.com/xray/ Pretty Printer for PHP, Java, C++, C, Perl, JavaScript, CSS "This is a source code beautifier (source code formatter), similar to indent. Please make a backup before you replace your code. Paste your source here..." http://www.prettyprinter.de/ +09: TYPOGRAPHY. Can I Force Text to Stay a Certain Size? By css-discuss wiki. "The short answer is no. A slightly longer answer is yes, but only for certain browsers. And the best answer is: it is not a good idea..." http://css-discuss.incutio.com/?page=ForceFontSize +10: USABILITY. Reviving Anorexic Web Writing By Amber Simmons. "Intelligent web content is the literature of our time. Amber Simmons argues that conventional approaches have starved the life out of web writing." http://www.alistapart.com/articles/revivinganorexicwebwriting Better Writing Through Design By Bronwyn Jones. "How is it that the very foundation of the web, written text, has taken a strategic back seat to design? Bronwyn Jones argues that great web design is not possible without the design of words." http://www.alistapart.com/articles/betterwritingthroughdesign Web Redesign is Bad Strategy By Gerry McGovern. "...I have seen perfectly okay websites go through a redesign for all the wrong reasons. And do you know who such redesigns hurt most? Your most loyal customers. Because they use your website most. A redesign is nearly always bad strategy. In fact, website redesigns are often pursued by organizations who don't have a web strategy." http://www.gerrymcgovern.com/nt/2007/nt-2007-07-30-redesign.htm +11: XML. RDF For The Rest Of Us By Keith Alexander. "We're rapidly getting to the point where most web developers have a decent grasp of what it means to use semantic markup? But how many of us really grasp the implications of the 'capital-S' Semantic Web? Keith Alexander walks us through the theory and practice of RDF on the web." http://www.digital-web.com/articles/rdf_for_the_rest_of_us/ Where's XML Going? By Kurt Cagle. "...I wanted to offer up an assessment of where XML itself is going.-...Note to the HTML camp - HTML 5.0 will be XML based, its just a question of how much core technology will separate it from XHTML 2. There is no valid reason for HTML not to close its tags, quote its attributes, and respect namespaces. I think the bigger debates are going to be around issues like XForms vs. HTML5 Forms, which I see as the question of whether the language should be component-centric or data model centric (and there are valid arguments on both sides of that one), and the degree to which CSS and JavaScript should control things. XBL (and XBL2) bindings bring a lot to the table, including a reasonably comprehensive mechanism for mixing the structure that tags bring with the fluidity of JavaScript to manipulate those tags. Certainly, I see user defined semantics for tags as being the hallmark of the next five years just as user defined activities are defining most of the next leg of the web. It also provides a formal mechanism for building mashups (god, that term is beginning to seem antiquated!) without breaking the integrity of an XHTML structure..." http://www.oreillynet.com/xml/blog/2007/07/wheres_xml_going.html [Section one ends.] ++ SECTION TWO: +12: What Can You Find at the Web Design Reference Site? Accessibility Information. http://www.d.umn.edu/goto/accessibility Association Information. http://www.d.umn.edu/goto/associations Book Listings. http://www.d.umn.edu/goto/books Cascading Style Sheets Information. http://www.d.umn.edu/goto/css Color Information. http://www.d.umn.edu/goto/color Dreamweaver Information. http://www.d.umn.edu/goto/dreamweaver Evaluation & Testing Information. http://www.d.umn.edu/goto/testing Event Information. http://www.d.umn.edu/goto/events Flash Information. http://www.d.umn.edu/goto/flash Information Architecture Information. http://www.d.umn.edu/goto/architecture JavaScript Information. http://www.d.umn.edu/goto/javascript Miscellaneous Web Information. http://www.d.umn.edu/goto/misc Navigation Information. http://www.d.umn.edu/goto/navigation PHP Information. http://www.d.umn.edu/goto/php Sites & Blogs Listing. http://www.d.umn.edu/goto/sites Standards, Guidelines & Pattern Information. http://www.d.umn.edu/goto/standards Tool Information. http://www.d.umn.edu/goto/tools Typography Information. http://www.d.umn.edu/goto/type Usability Information. http://www.d.umn.edu/goto/usability XML Information. http://www.d.umn.edu/goto/xml [Section two ends.] ++END NOTES. + SUBSCRIPTION INFO. WEB DESIGN UPDATE is available by subscription. For information on how to subscribe and unsubscribe please visit: http://www.d.umn.edu/goto/webdevlist The Web Design Reference Site also has a RSS 2.0 feed for site updates. + TEXT EMAIL NEWSLETTER (TEN). As a navigation aid for screen readers we do our best to conform to the accessible Text Email Newsletter (TEN) guidelines. Please let me know if there is anything else we can do to make navigation easier. For TEN guideline information please visit: http://www.headstar.com/ten + SIGN OFF. Until next time, Laura L. Carlson Information Technology Systems and Services University of Minnesota Duluth Duluth, MN U.S.A. 55812-3009 mailto:lcarlson@d.umn.edu [Issue ends.]