Archive for January, 2006

Developers Recommended to Support IE Rivals

Wednesday, January 25th, 2006

Web developers have been told to ensure that the sites they build are operable with browsers which rival Internet Explorer. This includes open-source heroes Firefox and Apple’s Safari. Deri Jones of SciVisum explains their reasoning and has the XiTI metrics to back it up:

Jones advised web developers to develop code around the W3C’s Cascading Style Sheets 2 specification, which simplifies site development by separating content and presentation, and makes sites more accessible to disabled people. “Those that stick to standards have much more reliable, stable and fast web sites,” Jones argued. “They should keep it simple, and [taking into consideration] accessibility issues also improves the performance of web sites.”

Semantics Rule

Tuesday, January 3rd, 2006

Taken from StraightUpSearch, yet another reason to get on the Standards Bus:

“Why should my corporation care what the page markup looks like? Because search engines do. They care so much that they have dedicated teams of programmers who do nothing but define meaning between elements on a page, developing algorithms to assign rank and value to each and every element of each and every page on the internet … the real value of web standards for businesses comes in the form of search engine results pages.”

Run That Past The Consortium

Monday, January 2nd, 2006

A Dilbert Cartoon

Winning ‘em over one at a time

Monday, January 2nd, 2006

The most common discussion when it comes to standards is about how you convince your boss or company that standards are the right way to go. There are a million good articles around the Internet about why standards are hot. There are just as many standards junkies working for organizations that can’t see the benefits. The goal of your average standards advocate is obviously to get their clients or organizations to switch to a standards approach. There is unfortunately no way to get them all at once.

Brian McElaney is a Combat Correspondent for the U.S. Marine Corp. He’s stationed in the horn of Africa where he takes part in humanitarian missions. Among his many other duties, he is responsible for maintaining the Combined Joint Task Force website. After his launch he put out a call to all Nerd-dom to help him critique the site. He is attempting to make the site as standards compliant as possible. He chose to use the very forgiving HTML Transitional schema for the site because someday he will turn it over to someone else with no web experience.

In a government which mandates the use of Internet Explorer, and rarely uses web standards when they build their sites, people like Brian become more and more integral in the standards movement. Organizations and branches of the government are won over one at a time. Large organizations like ESPN who have embraced web standards help the effort significantly but its the evangelism of the individuals building new sites or rebuilding old sites that help the movement the most.