Toby's Development Blog Just another PHP / Javascript Developer

26May/101

Robin Christopherson – Accessibility in Web Design

Robin Christopherson works at Abilitynet and gave an excellent talk last year at FOWA Dublin 2009 about some of the traps to avoid to keep your website accessible to all.

This year he was talking about pretty much exactly the same thing, which would be annoying only the need for accessible websites hasn't went away and people are still making the same mistakes.

I won't go through every example he gave but here are some of the important notes I took from his talk entitled Accessibility in Web Design.

  • Adobe Flash is getting more accessible but a lot of the older sites are still completely out of reach.
  • Youtube is in the process of moving to HTML5, whilst it is still using flash it is unaccessible.
  • Chrome currently doesn't play well with screen readers.
  • Google allows you to add captions in Youtube videos really really easily, this would really improve the experience of video for people who are hard of hearing.
  • Lots of mobile websites such as m.facebook.com are very accessible because they need to be for mobile devices.

One really cool thing I learned was that Opera Mini as a force single column mode, I have been a user of Opera Mini for ages and didn't know about this, one setting change and my experience on most websites using that browser has improved dramatically, vertical scrolling is basically eliminated.

Robin talked about Project Canvas, the following snippet is from their website and it seems like an interesting an worthwhile project.

Project Canvas is a proposed partnership between the BBC, ITV, C4, Five, BT and Talk Talk to build an open internet-connected TV platform, subject to BBC Trust approval.

Finally here are a few links he shared with us;

He mentioned some really valuable stuff and it was a very enjoyable presentation.

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24May/103

Eoghan McCabe and Des Traynor – Sexy or Meaningful

In my last writeup I mentioned that the content Owen DeLong was covering was a little dry but incredibly necessary.

Eoghan McCabe's and Des Traynor's (both from Contrast.ie) talk entitled Five Lessons We've Learned Sexy or Meaningful builds a lot upon the theme of necessity as they talk about why it is important to not always be chasing the sexy things in life.

They basically go through five areas of business and explain why in most cases the sexy option is the option you want to avoid like the plague.  This was an excellent talk delivered by two fantastic speakers.

With regards to business strategies they discussed things that didn't work;

  • Filling a hole in another product very rarely works.
  • Being a middle man doesn't work.
  • Generally relying on third parties for your business model to work isn't going to work.
  • Being first to market has no real advantage.
  • Creating copy cat apps isn't going to work (in personally, find that really boring)
  • Trendy businesses never seem to work (SEO companies for example)

And they concluded that we should be looking long term and to focus on the things that aren't going to change.

With regards to the people you are involved with they mentioned a couple of things;

  • Talent without discipline is bad.
  • Having a friend become a colleague can ruin the friendship.
  • You should always choose people for the right reasons.

Their third topic for discussion was about investments, basically they highlighted the fact that investment is sexy and reminded us that our business doesn't really need that much start up so why would you really need to chase money in the beginning?

Fourth on their list was the section on design, they warned us to watch out for trends and don't immediately follow them.  I couldn't agree more with this, it is so tempting to make all your corners rounded now and have a nice shadow effect around divs, but just because it is the flavour of the moment doesn't mean you are giving any real value to your users.

They gave an example of a good meaningful website - Craigslist.  They point out that the design hasn't changed and whilst it isn't sexy, it is very functional.   I would argue that sites like Amazon and Ebay would be in the same boat, not great to look at but usually easy to use.

Their talk ended with a section on marketing, here they listed some more key points;

  • Build your product first, then look at the marketing.
  • Let the product do the talking.
  • Don't chase overnight success.
  • Ignore tabloids.
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19May/100

Gotta love the google font API

I had read some tweets earlier today about the Google Font API and thought I would check it out.

Normally the way these things go down is I view the demos and have every intention of trying it myself but there are usually just a couple too many steps involved for the time I have allotted to dicking around the interwebs but this was so quick and so straight forward that I have eliminated cufon from this site in about 5 minutes.

Here are the steps I used;

  1. Follow the link above.
  2. Click on the font you want.
  3. Click get the code.
  4. Copy and paste the link into the head of your page.
  5. Update your CSS with a copy/paste.
  6. Done! (well, I also had to jump onto Wordpress and turn off Cufon in a settings page, but that is specific to my template.)

I am not a designer so I don't really know if those fonts are any good or not from a design point of view, but the potential for breaking away from the standard websafe fonts is huge!

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3Dec/090

YayQuery – My new favourite podcast?

This week I found out about a new podcast on the scene called YayQuery.  As you can imagine it is a discussion on jQuery, it is hosted by four experts in the field and seems to be producing fairly regular podcasts.

It rules for a couple of reasons

  • It it is such a laid back discussion from people who genuinely love jQuery.  A lot of tech podcasts are very dry, and just hard to listen to.
  • It mixes n00b and l33t levels of discussion excellently.  As someone who is just above n00b not nowhere near l33t I have found nothing too under or over whelming.
  • It lets you download it as a vodcast as well as a podcast.
  • The source code on their site is AWESOME. (seriously, check out their site and view the source, awesome)

At the time of writing they are on episode[3], plenty of time to play catch up!

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17Oct/090

jQuery Rollover

Here is a really nice and quick way of creating rollover states for image links using jQuery.

As you can see if it is a fairly old post, and obviously this is hardly tackling a new or complicated issue, but I like how the author has put some thought into the amount of jQuery being used and also how it has been made to be just a little bit more generic than some solutions.

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Hello

I am a PHP and JavaScript developer who works for Team Solutionz.

This website is what I use to talk about things most of my friends don't want me to talk about to them! For some reason they find coding alien and boring... I have strange friends.

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