Re: TAU lectures, BG Airport departures/arrivals, Kupat Holim lab results -- Linux

2010-07-27 Thread Ariel Biener

Going to the state comptroller is a avenue to be used after you
have exhausted other possible options.

I have no idea about other sites, but if you do have a problem with
TAU websites or browser compatibility, the least would be to
open a ticket with TAU helpdesk, and let TAU fix the problem
(which they will if they can, unlike other sites).

While I may agree that in general, it is desirable that sites would be
cross platform, and that if other avenues were tried and they failed,
turning to the state comptroller may be an option, I find the below
e-mail a popolistic arms wrestling attempt, nothing more.

--Ariel

Stan Goodman wrote:
 There was some discussion here not long ago about the tendency of Israeli 
 website owners to ignore issues of access by users of non-Microsoft 
 browsers, and there seemed then to be a feeling that something ought to 
 be done about it. That feeling seems to have dissipated, although the 
 problem remains (and promises to get worse).

 To challenge the indifference of web designers to the problem seems a lost 
 cause, as many of them have learned (I use the term loosely) to code in 
 inexpensive Microsoft-sponsored courses which exist largely for the 
 purpose of indoctrinating their students in the belief that 
 MS enhancements are the best or only way to code web pages; they are 
 not knowledgeable enough to understand arguments to the contrary. Owners 
 of websites are also not a productive target for persuasion, e.g. because 
 they feel that if they are reaching 90% of their clients, they have done 
 as well as they ever can do, which really is not an illogical business 
 decision.

 On the other hand, all the organizations listed in the Subject line above 
 are quasi-governmental agencies, and therefore have a responsibility to 
 serve any member of the public who is equipped with standard apparatus, 
 without regard to specific proprietary gear. They are all subject to the 
 oversight of the State Comptroller, and I submit that the State 
 Comptroller is the office that should be approached with the complaint 
 and argument that these agencies are delinquent in their responsibility, 
 given that e.g. Firefox is compliant with standards, whereas Internet 
 Explorer (although universally favored by the ignoramuses who code the 
 websites in question) is not.

 If this makes sense to others, and if there is still interest in 
 rectifying this long-time problem, I propose that a proper complaint be 
 lodged with the Comptroller, who is bound to respond within a length of 
 time set by law (I think it is three months). I think that this letter 
 should be be drafted by a committee representing IGLU and signed by the 
 largest possible number of  members. 

 The problem is not going to go away by itself.

   

-- 
 --
 Ariel Biener
 e-mail: ar...@post.tau.ac.il
 PGP: http://www.tau.ac.il/~ariel/pgp.html


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Re: TAU lectures, BG Airport departures/arrivals, Kupat Holim lab results -- Linux

2010-07-26 Thread Kfir Lavi
Hi All,
Maccabi and Meuhedet works for us fine under firefox.

Regards,
Kfir

2010/7/25 Ori Idan o...@helicontech.co.il

 ‎‎These are 3 different organizations and all of them I think is not
 subject to the state comptroller.

 TAU lectures is one problem that I have no idea how to solve.

 BG Airport departures is the only thing that might be of interest to the
 state comptroller. When we approach him, we should talk about standards and
 accessibility and not about Linux.

 Kupat Holim, as much as I heard lately works fine with FireFox.
 I myself tested Macabi web site, Omer Zak if I am not mistaken reported
 lately that Clalit also works fine.
 I don't know about the other health organizations in Israel.

 --
 Ori Idan



 On Sun, Jul 25, 2010 at 9:08 PM, Stan Goodman 
 stan.good...@hashkedim.comwrote:

 There was some discussion here not long ago about the tendency of Israeli
 website owners to ignore issues of access by users of non-Microsoft
 browsers, and there seemed then to be a feeling that something ought to
 be done about it. That feeling seems to have dissipated, although the
 problem remains (and promises to get worse).

 To challenge the indifference of web designers to the problem seems a lost
 cause, as many of them have learned (I use the term loosely) to code in
 inexpensive Microsoft-sponsored courses which exist largely for the
 purpose of indoctrinating their students in the belief that
 MS enhancements are the best or only way to code web pages; they are
 not knowledgeable enough to understand arguments to the contrary. Owners
 of websites are also not a productive target for persuasion, e.g. because
 they feel that if they are reaching 90% of their clients, they have done
 as well as they ever can do, which really is not an illogical business
 decision.

 On the other hand, all the organizations listed in the Subject line above
 are quasi-governmental agencies, and therefore have a responsibility to
 serve any member of the public who is equipped with standard apparatus,
 without regard to specific proprietary gear. They are all subject to the
 oversight of the State Comptroller, and I submit that the State
 Comptroller is the office that should be approached with the complaint
 and argument that these agencies are delinquent in their responsibility,
 given that e.g. Firefox is compliant with standards, whereas Internet
 Explorer (although universally favored by the ignoramuses who code the
 websites in question) is not.

 If this makes sense to others, and if there is still interest in
 rectifying this long-time problem, I propose that a proper complaint be
 lodged with the Comptroller, who is bound to respond within a length of
 time set by law (I think it is three months). I think that this letter
 should be be drafted by a committee representing IGLU and signed by the
 largest possible number of  members.

 The problem is not going to go away by itself.

 --
 Stan Goodman
 Qiryat Tiv'on
 Israel

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Re: TAU lectures, BG Airport departures/arrivals, Kupat Holim lab results -- Linux

2010-07-26 Thread Orna Agmon Ben-Yehuda
2010/7/25 Ori Idan o...@helicontech.co.il

 ‎‎These are 3 different organizations and all of them I think is not
 subject to the state comptroller.

 TAU lectures is one problem that I have no idea how to solve.

 BG Airport departures is the only thing that might be of interest to the
 state comptroller. When we approach him, we should talk about standards and
 accessibility and not about Linux.

 Kupat Holim, as much as I heard lately works fine with FireFox.
 I myself tested Macabi web site, Omer Zak if I am not mistaken reported
 lately that Clalit also works fine.


Clalit works pretty well, though their search does not work - neither in
Firefox nor in Chrome.


 I don't know about the other health organizations in Israel.

 --
 Ori Idan



 On Sun, Jul 25, 2010 at 9:08 PM, Stan Goodman 
 stan.good...@hashkedim.comwrote:

 There was some discussion here not long ago about the tendency of Israeli
 website owners to ignore issues of access by users of non-Microsoft
 browsers, and there seemed then to be a feeling that something ought to
 be done about it. That feeling seems to have dissipated, although the
 problem remains (and promises to get worse).

 To challenge the indifference of web designers to the problem seems a lost
 cause, as many of them have learned (I use the term loosely) to code in
 inexpensive Microsoft-sponsored courses which exist largely for the
 purpose of indoctrinating their students in the belief that
 MS enhancements are the best or only way to code web pages; they are
 not knowledgeable enough to understand arguments to the contrary. Owners
 of websites are also not a productive target for persuasion, e.g. because
 they feel that if they are reaching 90% of their clients, they have done
 as well as they ever can do, which really is not an illogical business
 decision.

 On the other hand, all the organizations listed in the Subject line above
 are quasi-governmental agencies, and therefore have a responsibility to
 serve any member of the public who is equipped with standard apparatus,
 without regard to specific proprietary gear. They are all subject to the
 oversight of the State Comptroller, and I submit that the State
 Comptroller is the office that should be approached with the complaint
 and argument that these agencies are delinquent in their responsibility,
 given that e.g. Firefox is compliant with standards, whereas Internet
 Explorer (although universally favored by the ignoramuses who code the
 websites in question) is not.

 If this makes sense to others, and if there is still interest in
 rectifying this long-time problem, I propose that a proper complaint be
 lodged with the Comptroller, who is bound to respond within a length of
 time set by law (I think it is three months). I think that this letter
 should be be drafted by a committee representing IGLU and signed by the
 largest possible number of  members.

 The problem is not going to go away by itself.

 --
 Stan Goodman
 Qiryat Tiv'on
 Israel

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-- 
Orna Agmon Ben-Yehuda.
http://ladypine.org
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TAU lectures, BG Airport departures/arrivals, Kupat Holim lab results -- Linux

2010-07-25 Thread Stan Goodman
There was some discussion here not long ago about the tendency of Israeli 
website owners to ignore issues of access by users of non-Microsoft 
browsers, and there seemed then to be a feeling that something ought to 
be done about it. That feeling seems to have dissipated, although the 
problem remains (and promises to get worse).

To challenge the indifference of web designers to the problem seems a lost 
cause, as many of them have learned (I use the term loosely) to code in 
inexpensive Microsoft-sponsored courses which exist largely for the 
purpose of indoctrinating their students in the belief that 
MS enhancements are the best or only way to code web pages; they are 
not knowledgeable enough to understand arguments to the contrary. Owners 
of websites are also not a productive target for persuasion, e.g. because 
they feel that if they are reaching 90% of their clients, they have done 
as well as they ever can do, which really is not an illogical business 
decision.

On the other hand, all the organizations listed in the Subject line above 
are quasi-governmental agencies, and therefore have a responsibility to 
serve any member of the public who is equipped with standard apparatus, 
without regard to specific proprietary gear. They are all subject to the 
oversight of the State Comptroller, and I submit that the State 
Comptroller is the office that should be approached with the complaint 
and argument that these agencies are delinquent in their responsibility, 
given that e.g. Firefox is compliant with standards, whereas Internet 
Explorer (although universally favored by the ignoramuses who code the 
websites in question) is not.

If this makes sense to others, and if there is still interest in 
rectifying this long-time problem, I propose that a proper complaint be 
lodged with the Comptroller, who is bound to respond within a length of 
time set by law (I think it is three months). I think that this letter 
should be be drafted by a committee representing IGLU and signed by the 
largest possible number of  members. 

The problem is not going to go away by itself.

-- 
Stan Goodman
Qiryat Tiv'on
Israel

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Re: TAU lectures, BG Airport departures/arrivals, Kupat Holim lab results -- Linux

2010-07-25 Thread Ori Idan
‎‎These are 3 different organizations and all of them I think is not subject
to the state comptroller.

TAU lectures is one problem that I have no idea how to solve.

BG Airport departures is the only thing that might be of interest to the
state comptroller. When we approach him, we should talk about standards and
accessibility and not about Linux.

Kupat Holim, as much as I heard lately works fine with FireFox.
I myself tested Macabi web site, Omer Zak if I am not mistaken reported
lately that Clalit also works fine.
I don't know about the other health organizations in Israel.

-- 
Ori Idan


On Sun, Jul 25, 2010 at 9:08 PM, Stan Goodman stan.good...@hashkedim.comwrote:

 There was some discussion here not long ago about the tendency of Israeli
 website owners to ignore issues of access by users of non-Microsoft
 browsers, and there seemed then to be a feeling that something ought to
 be done about it. That feeling seems to have dissipated, although the
 problem remains (and promises to get worse).

 To challenge the indifference of web designers to the problem seems a lost
 cause, as many of them have learned (I use the term loosely) to code in
 inexpensive Microsoft-sponsored courses which exist largely for the
 purpose of indoctrinating their students in the belief that
 MS enhancements are the best or only way to code web pages; they are
 not knowledgeable enough to understand arguments to the contrary. Owners
 of websites are also not a productive target for persuasion, e.g. because
 they feel that if they are reaching 90% of their clients, they have done
 as well as they ever can do, which really is not an illogical business
 decision.

 On the other hand, all the organizations listed in the Subject line above
 are quasi-governmental agencies, and therefore have a responsibility to
 serve any member of the public who is equipped with standard apparatus,
 without regard to specific proprietary gear. They are all subject to the
 oversight of the State Comptroller, and I submit that the State
 Comptroller is the office that should be approached with the complaint
 and argument that these agencies are delinquent in their responsibility,
 given that e.g. Firefox is compliant with standards, whereas Internet
 Explorer (although universally favored by the ignoramuses who code the
 websites in question) is not.

 If this makes sense to others, and if there is still interest in
 rectifying this long-time problem, I propose that a proper complaint be
 lodged with the Comptroller, who is bound to respond within a length of
 time set by law (I think it is three months). I think that this letter
 should be be drafted by a committee representing IGLU and signed by the
 largest possible number of  members.

 The problem is not going to go away by itself.

 --
 Stan Goodman
 Qiryat Tiv'on
 Israel

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