Usability - Poor
One off the reasons is viewing your web gallery annoyed me. I had to
click through 3 pages to view the gallery and each time the flash too
a while to load.
- There is to much flash on the site that does not need to be there.
- Colors are poor
I could point out alo of things but
Hi,
http://rahulgonsalves.com/research/site/
I'm throwing together a quick site to try and fund my travel to an
accessibility conference. I haven't had too much time to check it, or
think it through, but I would appreciate a page check, and general
suggestions/comments. Also, I don't have
I am working on some new templates and am having a hard time figuring out what
is going on. I all browsers it works as it should but in IE6 it is not. From
the look sof it, the background image is going over top of the floating divs.
If I take out the background from:
#content {
marg
Sorry I forgot to add the link.
http://joekiosk.com/whs/inside.html
View this in any other browser it works. But look in IE6 and you will see what
I am talking about.
Thanks
James
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of Likely, James A.
Sent: Sat 11/17/2007 10:57 AM
T
Hi James
I guess removing position:relative for #content will help.
Another option is to set position:relative for your floats. May be you
will need to play a bit with z-index after that.
it would be great if you could upload this code to the internet for us
to see the problem.
hth
On 11/17/0
- The first thing that struck me was the blatent missues of the element.
- Missing title attribute from your anchor's
- No indication as to who or what your site is about. At least a logo or name.
- Why use XHTML? If you are not using anything XML related you should
be using HTML. HTML is not d
Thanks for the help regarding JavaScript all...very useful indeed.
I have a poser for you, one that my simple monkey brain is finding hard to
comprehend. On my site (www.spongeproject.co.uk ) I have a background image
set on the body and repeated. IE6, IE7, FF and Safari all behave themselves.
Ope
>> http://rahulgonsalves.com/research/site/
James Jeffery wrote:
- Missing title attribute from your anchor's
Not every anchor needs extra advisory information, so I don't see an
issue here.
- Why use XHTML? If you are not using anything XML related you should
be using HTML.
Why not? Wh
Rob Mason wrote:
(www.spongeproject.co.uk )
Opera displays the image as intended, but also repeats 50px or so of
the same image again, about half way up the page.
I have no idea what's going on. On a local copy I gave the image a
roundtrip through photoshop without making /any/ changes to it
James Jeffery wrote:
- The first thing that struck me was the blatent missues of the element.
- Missing title attribute from your anchor's
- No indication as to who or what your site is about. At least a logo or name.
- Why use XHTML? If you are not using anything XML related you should
be us
>Not every anchor needs extra advisory information, so I don't see an
>issue here.
The title attribute is optional, but a title can help to clearly and
accurately describe a link and for a website thats based around
accessibility he should be using the title attribute where needed. He
has an abbre
James Jeffery wrote:
Not every anchor needs extra advisory information, so I don't see an
issue here.
The title attribute is optional, but a title can help to clearly and
accurately describe a link and for a website thats based around
accessibility he should be using the title attribute where n
On 18-Nov-07, at 1:18 AM, James Jeffery wrote:
- The first thing that struck me was the blatent missues of the
element.
I like misusing me some ems!
Seriously, though, yes. I am using a technique that I saw on Stu
Nicholls site, CSS Play [1], which uses ems. Using a , or a
tag seems to
On 18-Nov-07, at 5:06 AM, James Jeffery wrote:
He has an abbreviation in his link: 'FAQ' which should be wrapped in
and he should use the title attribute here to add more
clarity.
Thanks for catching this one James. I did forget to add an
abbreviation for this. I have updated the page.
*
Ah shoot, mixed up my footnotes. I need some tea. Apologies to all
for increasing your inbox count.
The Ragged Float technique used by Stu Nicholls on CSS Play is
located here:
http://www.cssplay.co.uk/menu/flow.html
The WSG article on using xHTML versus using HTML is located here:
http:/
Rahul Gonsalves wrote:
Hi,
http://rahulgonsalves.com/research/site/
I'm throwing together a quick site to try and fund my travel to an
accessibility conference. I haven't had too much time to check it, or
think it through, but I would appreciate a page check, and general
suggestions/comments
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