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By: Peter Abrahams, Practice Leader - Accessibility and Usability, Bloor Research Published: 2nd November 2007 Copyright Bloor Research © 2007 |
There are a variety of little things that I think my readers would be interested in.
I was watching television on Friday 2 November and saw a program called Britain's Brilliant Ideas Boom and suddenly saw something I recognised. It was Gridsure which I wrote about earlier this year. It looks so it is going to be a great success that you saw here first.
This was held on 30th October in London. Its name is slightly misleading because it was aimed at increasing awareness amongst organisations involved with training around the European Computer Driving Licence (ECDL) qualifications, rather than raising general awareness.
In fact I think it was a shame that it was not publicised and
aimed at a wider audience. I attended the afternoon session and
heard a couple of very interesting presentations.
The first was by Mandy de la Mare who is a thalidomide victim and
was born without any arms and has subsequently lost her sight. She
demonstrated how she uses the computer with JAWS (for reading to
her), Dragon (for dictating and controlling the computer) and J-Say
that makes the two work in combination. She showed that if things
are set up right, and that obviously includes the design of web
sites, that the computer can be a life enhancing facility.
The second talk was by Alistair McNaught from JISC TechDis. He provides accessibility advice and assistance to higher and further education institutions. He showed some simple techniques for making training material more accessible, such as using styles for headings in word so that the structure of the document is easily understood. Although these ideas are crucial in higher education, where it is imperative to include students with disabilities, they apply equally to all other forms of education, in or out of the workplace, and in fact to any form of formal communication. He asked two questions:
TechDis has created a series of booklets describing these ideas. Softcopy of these are available for free download from TechDis Accessibility Essentials. They are worth looking at as they look at various functions of Word and PDF and showing how they can make documents more accessible.
The British Standards Institute made a press release on November 1 announcing PAS 124. An extract says:
‘British web compliance expert Magus Ltd, has commissioned BSI British Standards to develop a Publicly Available Specification (PAS 124) for web standards. Web standards govern the effectiveness, function and appearance of a website, and include: brand, legal, accessibility, search engine optimisation (SEO), usability and technical standards.’
I will be following this with great interest and will be involved with the public comment.
The Cabinet Office in the UK sits at the very centre of government and has an overarching purpose of making government work better. It has just put a document out to public consultation called Delivering Inclusive Websites. I have skimmed it and it appears a helpful document with good simple advice and lots of references to other material. Please look at it and feed back comments before 13 November 2007.
When the document is published it will become vital reading for any UK government web site owner because it states:
"Websites which fail to meet the mandated level of conformance shall be subject to the withdrawal process for .gov.uk domain names, as set out in Naming and Registering Websites."
November 8th 2007 is International Usability Day. Unfortunately I have only just heard about this. It is in its third year and World Usability Day was founded to ensure that the services and products important to life are easier to access and simpler to use. There are at least four events going on in the UK this year see http://worldusabilityday.org/ .
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