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  • Flash - My view on best practice

    A conversation I had with a designer friend today where he asked me what I thought about Flash web sites got me thinking. Flash content might be "flash", but it is not necessarily useful, functional or usable. I'm not a great fan of Flash, but I can see it's value to the web. It provides...
    Posted to Nathan J Pledger by Nathan Pledger on 05-24-2008
    Filed under: Accessibility, SEO, Flash
  • Photosensitivity Epilepsy - are your banners safe?

    In creating animation, people (including clients) don't always consider the refresh rates of these assets. Not only can animated banners and the like be quite unattractive and annoying, they can also be quite unsafe for some users, particularly htose who are photosensitivity epileptic. In determining...
    Posted to Nathan J Pledger by Nathan Pledger on 05-14-2008
    Filed under: Accessibility
  • The little things in checkouts can make all the difference

    I have just completed revisiting the checkout portion of the various e-Commerce sites I help manage. The reason for the revisit was to establish ways to improve the conversion rate of users that enter the checkout and complete the checkout to make the purchase. Part of the testing process has highlighted...
    Posted to Nathan J Pledger by Nathan Pledger on 04-24-2008
    Filed under: Accessibility, e-Commerce
  • isleofman.com - exciting new look

    This is going to be about a local issue, but no less relavant to my on-going pontification about web best practice. I hope that you'll enjoy it, even if you don't enjoy living here on The Isle of Man, as I do! The Isle of Man nestles in between Ireland and England, and is home to major finance...
    Posted to Nathan J Pledger by Nathan Pledger on 04-10-2008
    Filed under: Accessibility, isleofman.com, SEO, Isle of Man
  • Semantic Web 2.0 User Generated Content is difficult to achieve

    I've been interested in the semantic and accessible web for over five years, now, and the benefits I have developed on various web sites are clear to see. Semantic content is where web pages are 'marked-up' according to their structural significance, as opposed to their presentational significance...
    Posted to Nathan J Pledger by Nathan Pledger on 03-23-2008
    Filed under: Accessibility, WEB 2.0, User Generated Content
  • XHTML Deadlock

    Was well impressed when I heard .NET 2.0 was going to be XHTML compliant. I should have realised it was too good to be true. Why do server controls get assigned a NAME attribute? XHTML Specification clearly states: in XHTML 1.0, the name attribute of these elements is formally deprecated, and will be...
    Posted to Nathan J Pledger by Nathan Pledger on 06-22-2006
    Filed under: Accessibility, Visual Studio .NET 2005 / ASP.NET 2.0
  • Links in new windows

    I haven't posted for a while and happened on an article I will post shortly, but in introducing it, I stumbled on an annoying issue in sites I continue to see. So, I will post this, and then link back to it in due course. It is also relevant as I have been asked by a site designer I am helping about...
    Posted to Nathan J Pledger by Nathan Pledger on 03-24-2006
    Filed under: Accessibility
  • Speaking Browser -> Speaking Paper?

    An article intrigued me today on C|NET: http://news.com.com/High-tech+photos+give+new+meaning+to+talking+pictures/2100-1041_3-5954367.html?tag=nefd.lede This article covers a technology being developed by Zanetti Studio, which allows speech, or other audio, ot be attached to a printout using a specially...
    Posted to Nathan J Pledger by Nathan Pledger on 11-18-2005
    Filed under: Accessibility
  • Anatomy of an Accessible ASP.NET 1.1 Site (part 2)

    This continues on from a previous entry at my post for 14th November 2005 . It discusses the site at http://www.zoomthegroom.co.uk . While ASP.NET 2.0 has appeared, and (finally) outputs XHTML which helps move the ASP.NET community to true accessibility, 1.1 is still around and will be for some time...
    Posted to Nathan J Pledger by Nathan Pledger on 11-15-2005
    Filed under: Accessibility
  • Anatomy of an Accessible ASP.NET 1.1 Site (part 1)

    While ASP.NET 2.0 has appeared, and (finally) outputs XHTML which helps move the ASP.NET community to true accessibility, 1.1 is still around and will be for some time yet. This article covers how I developed a site using standards for mark-up, style-sheets and accessibility and includes a couple of...
    Posted to Nathan J Pledger by Nathan Pledger on 11-14-2005
    Filed under: Accessibility
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