y spend the resources on ensuring their site is accessible and
> then provide BrowseAloud to their audience as an addition to that.
> Feel free to contact me with any questions.
> Cheers,
> Gian
>
> On Wed, Feb 22, 2012 at 8:25 AM, James O'Neill wrote:
>
>> They just cont
They just contacted and I have not yet talked with them.
I am doing some research first.
Thanks for the link.
Jim
On Tue, Feb 21, 2012 at 14:55, Patrick H. Lauke wrote:
> On 21/02/2012 19:39, Steve Green wrote:
>
>> The merits of ReadSpeaker (and BrowseAloud, which is very similar) have
>> bee
than the
> fairly narrow range of user groups that benefit from ReadSpeaker.
>
> ** **
>
> Steve Green
>
> ** **
>
> *From:* li...@webstandardsgroup.org [mailto:li...@webstandardsgroup.org] *On
> Behalf Of *James O'Neill
> *Sent:* 21 February 2012 19:58
udget for these services (and they are
> not cheap) there are much better ways you can spend the money that will
> benefit more people.
>
> ** **
>
> Steve Green
>
> Managing Director
>
> Test Partners Ltd
>
> ** **
>
> *From:* li...@webst
Any thoughts on the Usability or Accessibility of Read Speaker
http://www.readspeaker.com
If you have any reports, reviews or comparisons that would be great too.
Thanks all,
Jjim
***
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I work for a small county government and we are working with a developer to
setup a Drupal website. I am of the opinion that the editor can make or
break the utilization of the website by our mostly not very savvy employees.
If it is too hard or creates work then it will not be used or people will
Hey Thierry,
Actually, your solution and the Improved Suckerfish thingy were the first
two that came to mind. =)
Any other options for Drupal out there?
Thanks again everyone.
***
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Greetings all,
We are working with an external developer who does speak Accessibility and
Usability a bit, but not enough for me.
I am looking for accessible and standards based Drupal main navigation
module thingy with the specific requirement of being navigable via tabbing,
including submenus.
If you are worried about validation an anchor tag cannot have block elements
in it, if I remember correctly, which is a little annoying. I think HTML2
and HTML5 correct this.
Barring validation, it seems like the way to do it. I am not sure, but you
may want to check how IE6 handles this too.
O
I'm a bit late but here are some good 'skip link' links:
http://joeclark.org/book/sashay/serialization/Chapter08.html
http://www.webaim.org/techniques/skipnav/
http://juicystudio.com/article/skip-links.php
***
List Gu
Really, really unfortunately, the only way is through CSS 3's
*counter.**Somebody
correct me if I am wrong. This is one of the things that really makes me
cranky. =(*
*
*
On Mon, Sep 28, 2009 at 08:02, T. R. Valentine wrote:
> What is the proper way to start an ordered list at a value other than
This straight OL does not work from a pure XHTML 1.0 Strict perspective
unless your legal documents conform to the browsers' default list numbering
scheme.
The *'type'* attribute is not valid in XHTML 1.0 which really annoys me to
no end, since I work for a county government. The numbering in a le
Hmmm... I do not really remember.
I have used both together and separately at different times.
By enclosing a form control with a label you will have a little more control
over relative styling since you could something like this:
label:hover input {outline:solidl}
or have more precise p
I think the ID's are required for the 'for' attribute to work for labels,
which enables the their clickability. When these labels are clicked on they
focus on the element whose ID is in the for attribute.
Enter you comments:
Plus having ID's associated allows for more sophisticated form error
hand
Greetings all,
I am curious if it is currently possible to have a list item display its
list counter with parenthesis around it such as this:
1. Item 1
(a). sub item 1
The only way I can think of this is via CSS 3 which is not currently widely
supported, especially in our
Our small county site has about 297k visitors last year and about 1.9%
(5,700) had Javascript disabled according to SuperStats.
On Mon, Jan 26, 2009 at 14:33, Jessica Enders wrote:
> Hi Pascal
>
> In the JavaScript/Accessibility/form validation discussion you mention "the
> growing number of use
Henrik,
Thank you for your feed back. I am working on those now. =)
The little globe is used to indicate links to external sites. Perhaps
another icon would indicate this better?
What would you suggest for the link colors. I prefer colors that make the
links stand our and not blend into the rest
Alan,
Font size: hmmm I use the the '100.01% on the body and them 1em on
body/table' settings... What resolution are you using?
Image Gallery: Thanks. The CSS for the image gallery was somehow deleted
during all of the editing. That is fixed now. Thank you for noticing.
Images: Hopefully in t
Greetings everyone,
I just published this site: www.ItsAllAboutYou-Studio.com for my our Yoga
Studio to-be and I am curious for a critique.
Someone else came up with the design and I hand-coded this in Dreamweaver.
Tonight I will be applying Dean Edward's IE7/8, so, hopefully I can get rid
of some
Susan,
That give me an idea. I am just starting to learn PHP and Drupal so making
changes on my own will be fun. I am looking forward to tacking some.
Thanks,
Jim
I am currently working on a large Drupal project using lots of modules. I
> have created my own Theme that is 508 compliant (and
Greetings all,
I am in the process of working with a developer on a Drupal project and I
was wondering if there was any Standards Compliant and/or Semantically
Correct widgets for Drupal out there... specifically for dropdown navigation
(which is a primary concern of mine) or other things...
I am
Greetings all,
*I posted the following on the Drupal Forums and I will post it here as well
for your consideration:*
Currently, we are working towards bids for a full site developed, including
back-end database work and, potentially, custom mods and content types. I
have a page layout and design
I work for a small county government and we own and manage our own servers.
CDONT's is easy for us to implement right now.
We are in the process of looking for a CMS and that will hopefully handle it
once we get there.
Jim
.
***
Li
Greetings all,
Does anyone know of a solid and robust Javascript based ASP Form Mail script
that outputs a compliant confirmation email as well?
Thanx
***
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I've tried this too, with no luck in IE. I was able to get FF and Opera to
play well.
=(
On 4/16/07, Patrick H. Lauke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I'm just at the beginning of a little experimentation, and already IE
stumps me.
Basically, trying to use a table in markup but hide one column and
A table seems fine as would a definition list.
Jim
--
__
"Bugs are, by definition, necessary.
Just ask Microsoft!"
www.co.sauk.wi.us (Work)
www.arionshome.com (Personal)
www.freexenon.com (Consulting)
__
Take Back the Web w
Tom,
Body or HTML it doesn't really matter as it will cascade down to
everything else. I set the Percent on the Root Element and then the EM
on the Body just so that the EM font size is set as the default
everywhere vice the Percent.
Later on in what I refer to as the Core Style sheet I set every
I as well.
This is the default for my stylesheets
html {font-size:100.01%;}
body, table {font-size:1em; }
http://www.freexenon.com/2005/10/css-fonts-and-font-sizing.html
Jim
On 2/22/06, Tom Livingston <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> On 2/20/06 5:14 AM, "Martin Heiden" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote
Three validation issues that are easy to fix http://validator.w3.org/check?verbose=1&uri=http://www.shetlandcoffee.com/site/index.cfm
The CSS validates! There are some alignment issues as other have mentioned. The colored stripe in background seems to be too low or the content too hight??Jim
On
I haven't looked at the code but overflow:hidden wil give you the effect you are looking for!On 12/21/05, Barrie North <
[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi all,
I have a fluid layout and for the life of me can't get
the image to be "cropped" as the screen adjusts.Here is the link:
100.01% on body and then em's for the rest This prevents scaling issues with IE and older versions of Operahttp://www.freexenon.com/2005/10/css-fonts-and-font-sizing.html
-- __"Bugs are, by definition, necessary. Just ask Microsoft!"www.co.sauk.wi.us (Work)
www.a
Cheree,
One of the first things I will say it looks like you might be writing
this in MS Frontpage!
You have a lot of inline javascipt:
Your may want to take a look at Unobtrusive Javascript
http://www.onlinetools.org/articles/unobtrusivejavascript/
Keeping your javascript in an external file
Cheree ,One of the first things you will want to do is to validate your code. That will be of a tremedous help not only to your development process, but it will also go a long way towards getting more answers here. Validation is your friend!!
You can pick up Chris Pedericks developer tool bar for F
As far as I am aware acronym is deprecated in XHTML 2.0 in favor of abbr? Here is an article on it from Lars Holst which dates back to 2003, but I think that it is still very relevant.
http://larsholst.info/blog/index.php?p=14&more=1#more14-- __"Bugs are, by defi
My only little comment is to either make the font size fo the nav bar a little bigger or to bold the text. The size of the font seems kind of hard to read verses the background.On 12/2/05,
Patrick Haney <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Guys, I'm on a PC with Firefox 1.5, IE 6.0 and Opera 8.5. Everythi
Stephan,
I do not know if it desprecated but if you want to use it you can add
the following to your CSS declarations:
body { margin-top; 200px; }
however you may want to go with
body { margin-top: 12em; }
so it scales with fluid designs (or use percentages).
Jim
On 11/25/05, Stephen Kortz <
e best) proves mosteffective with todays browsers.Joe Taylor
http://sitesbyjoe.comThierry Koblentz wrote:>James O'Neill wrote:>>>>I am having problems with a menu that is similar to the Alistapart's>>hybrid menu. I can not get the width to be consistantly even with the
&g
I am having problems with a menu that is similar to the Alistapart's
hybrid menu. I can not get the width to be consistantly even with the
rest of the
site and it is not workig in IE or Opera. It works fine in Firebird. I
have been beating my head against this for quite a long time.
It seems that
Hey Guys,
I am curious if you know of a way in Javascript to change the Time
Zone Offset for Date Object. There is a way to getTimezoneOffset, but
I do not see a way to set the Time Zone Offset. When you create a new
Date object it will always be set to the current local time zone as
defined on y
Iam a little bit on the references but
html {font-size: 100.01%;}
body {font-size: 1em;}
References:
http://www.communitymx.com/content/article.cfm?cid=FAF76&print=true
Bottom of Page mentions this
http://css-discuss.incutio.com/?page=BrowserBugs
Check http://css-discuss.incutio.co
I think that the fix is 100.01% on the html element and the 1em (or what ever height) on body element.
This prevents scaling issues in older versions of Opera and in Internet Explorer.
I can try to find you references tomorrow.
Looks great! On 9/20/05, Thierry Koblentz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Greetings All,
I am considering taking the User Centered Design seminars via Human
Factors International in Chicago Illinois when it comes around here in
September. Work will pay for it, so cost is not an issue.
I am wondering if any of you have taken their seminars or know
anything about them.
Marcel,
Give this a spin:
http://www.vischeck.com/vischeck/
JimOn 8/18/05, Zulema <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Quoting Marcel Pociot <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:> Hallo zusammen!>> Ich suche nach einer Erweiterung für Firefox , die es ermöglicht eine> Webseite in Graustufen anzeigen zu lassen.
> Im Bezug
Mario,
/* use percentile on html to prevent IE from seemingly using a logrimthic increase and decrease
in font size when scaling (IE
Bug) and use 100.1% to prevent a bug in Opera, and then set your font
sizes in em's after that. Declare Body and Table Font size together to
compensate for
If you set the Body font size to 100.01% you can avoid the scaling
issue in IE and some older versions of Opera, and be able to use font
sizes less than 1em.
Go towards the very bottom of this page - it has an explanation:
http://www.communitymx.com/content/article.cfm?cid=FAF76&print=true
-- __
Cole
The real trick is to understand what the specification means and why it
says what it says. There has always been disputes about the validity of
an automated tester saying 'Yes this site is compliant'. You can code a
terrible page that will pass an automated test. It is important to code
in th
Miles
Try this:
#breadcrumbs li {white-space:nowrap;}
On Thu, 23 Dec 2004 16:25:28 +1030, Miles Tillinger
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm trying to represent the path as an unordered list, e.g.
>
> Home > Level One > Level Two > Level Three > etc.
>
>
> Home
> Level One
>
Anthony,
Do not get discouraged. Designing semantically correct, accessible,
and valid sites is not easy. Transitioning to standards compliant
design is a long frustrating road, but it is well worth the pain.
There are many that can forget the journey that we all traveled to get
where we are toda
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