RE: [WSG] Are wireframes necessary when using web standards?

2004-08-06 Thread Beau Lebens
Nancy,

Wireframe more often is used to refer to outlined page designs. I.e. a very
rough idea of what a page design will look like, normally just black outline
boxes, no colour, no real text, no nothing :)

They are a way to start visualising the design of a page and how all the
elements will fit together, but are by no means a final design.

HTH

Beau

// -Original Message-
// From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
// [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Nancy Johnson
// Sent: Friday, August 06, 2004 3:37 AM
// To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
// Subject: RE: [WSG] Are wireframes necessary when using web standards?
// 
// 
// Showing my ignorance:
// 
// Don't wireframes show flow only? Like the map view in 
// Dreamweaver? Or is it an actual possible design one creates 
// often in Photoshop, though this article indicated Freehand.
// 
// Nancy
// 
// -Original Message-
// From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
// [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Andy Budd
// Sent: Friday, August 06, 2004 5:19 AM
// To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
// Subject: Re: [WSG] Are wireframes necessary when using web standards?
// 
// Ian Fenn wrote:
// 
// > My client wanted something to show internal stakeholders 
// so I started
// > doing a few wireframes but suddenly wondered, "Why am I 
// doing this? 
// > Why don't I just build the website using web standards?"
// >
// > A day later I finished a working prototype of the website 
// in question.
// 
// > The client is happy but another producer has been quite 
// vocal with his
// 
// > opinion that the prototype was built too early.
// >
// > From my perspective, a prototype has more value than 
// wireframes. Web
// > standards make development much more rapid, so we can 
// respond quickly 
// > to any other needs thrown up before going into production.
// >
// > What do you think?
// 
// Here's my take.
// 
// I think wireframes are a great first step in developing a 
// site with a 
// complex user flow. I'll often literally just sketch them on 
// paper. They 
// take no time at all and are very easy to change. Because they are 
// rough, people don't get too attached to them as well, which 
// is a bonus.
// 
// If I'm creating slightly more polished wireframes I'll do them in 
// Freehand. I've all the widgets and templates created, so I 
// can knock a 
// batch of wireframes up very quickly. I can annotate them myself with 
// instructions or print them out and have people scribble on them with 
// suggestions. All very useful.
// 
// I can then hand them over to the client and they can sign 
// each one off. 
// This forces the client to understand and take responsibility 
// for each 
// wireframe and the signed off wireframes become part of our project 
// spec.
// 
// HTML prototypes can be extremely useful as they give you and 
// the client 
// a real understanding of the user flow. It's fine looking through a 
// batch of wireframes, but nothing gives you the feel of a 
// website like, 
// er, a website.
// 
// However I think you have to be a particularly gifted developer to be 
// able to knock up a half descent HTML template in anything 
// near the time 
// it takes to create one in Freehand (or the graphics package of your 
// choice).
// 
// Also for the HTML template to be as flexible as it's paper 
// equivalent 
// you really do need some mechanism for adding 
// notes/instructions (like a 
// div that you can toggle on and off) and allowing the client 
// to comment 
// and sign them off. Obviously as they are HTML there is no 
// way you can 
// really include them in your spec.
// 
// The other big issue is that people get very protective of 
// their 'code'. 
// I could see it being very tempting not to change something on a 
// wireframe because it's a 'hassle' rather than for any strategic 
// reasons. also their is the temptation to try and cut corners 
// and turn 
// your prototype into the real thing. Never a good idea in my 
// book, as, 
// by definition, a prototype is a rough, rushed version of what you 
// actually want to build.
// 
// My position them would be to always wireframe and to build 
// prototypes 
// when you have the time/budget.
// 
// Andy Budd
// 
// http://www.message.uk.com/
// 
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RE: [WSG] Quark and tagged PDFs

2004-07-05 Thread Beau Lebens
Title: Message



Cheryl,
 
I 
don't have any firsthand experience with Quark, but if there is an Adobe 
plugin/tie-in for directly creating PDFs (as opposed to 'printing' to PDF), then 
I would imagine that the choices are there.
 
On a 
guess, I would think that you'd need to make sure the PDFs being created weren't 
overly 'secured' in the PDF format, in particular they would probably need to 
allow "Selecting and Copying of Text". You'd also have to make sure that your 
people were actually producing *text* in the PDFs, not images that looked like 
text (if you know what I mean).
 
Hope 
that helps, and as I said, those are guesses, so if there's someone out there 
with a clue, please share it :)
 
Beau
 

  
  -Original Message-From: 
  [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of 
  Lead, CherylSent: Monday, 5 July 2004 3:01 PMTo: 
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]Subject: [WSG] Quark and tagged 
  PDFs
  Hi, 
  Does anyone know much about creating accessible 
  PDFs using Quark? 
  We're looking at ways to make our site fully 
  accessible, and we use lots of PDFs. I've been reading about tagged PDFs and 
  how screenreaders can read them, but I don't know enough about Quark. Our 
  designers use it to create our PDFs (and it's quite unlikely they will change 
  programs without a good reason). 
  First of all, is it possible to do - can accessible 
  PDFs be created using Quark, and if it is, is there much work 
  involved?
  Thanks 
  Cheryl ** IMPORTANT MESSAGE **The 
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RE: [WSG] Form submission: CAPTCHA test and accessibility

2004-04-15 Thread Beau Lebens
Nick,
I can't remember where I saw it, but one service I signed up to had the
option to click a link and *hear* the keyword as well, I assume they
were using some sort of text-to-speech to do that, or you could also
apparently call them and get one read to you or something like that.

Personally, I don't like them. As a user, any additional 'transaction'
required for me to complete a task is just another hurdle for me to
cross to get where I'm going. I'm sure there are better ways to prevent
automated systems,  but this one seems to work so people have stopped
working on new ones for now...

What annoys me is that with the proliferation of this sort of thing,
people will get used to it, accept it, then not really notice that they
have to do it all the time, and then no one will realise that we've just
condemned visually impaired users (and anyone else who can't load images
for whatever reason!) back to the dark-ages of not being able to access
anything.

Just my 0.02c

Beau

// -Original Message-
// From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
// [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Nick Lo
// Sent: Friday, 16 April 2004 9:18 AM
// To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
// Subject: [WSG] Form submission: CAPTCHA test and accessibility
// 
// 
// I was wondering if any of you had opinions/thoughts on the use of 
// CAPTCHA tests (or whatever proper name is given to the 
// little numbered 
// images used to verify a form submitting user is human and not a 
// spamming machine).
// 
// They are obviously a reaction to the ever increasing amounts of spam 
// being imposed on, e.g. comments systems, however I wondered how much 
// their uptake could end up excluding certain users, e.g. 
// vision impaired.
// 
// Nick
// 
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// See http://webstandardsgroup.org/mail/guidelines.cfm
// for some hints on posting to the list & getting help
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// 
// 

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RE: [WSG] Constructive Criticism please

2004-04-14 Thread Beau Lebens
Title: Message



Jackie,
i'm 
using ie6 on winxp, and one thing i noticed was that you need to include border 
sizes on your navigation links (all except the top section), to avoid it all 
jumping around on hover. i *hate* when that happens ;)
 
because you're adding borders in when i hover, you should just make it so 
that without a hover, they have the same width border, just either transparent 
or the same colour as the background, then everything will stay where you place 
it on hover, just change colour.
 
Cheers,
 
Beau

  
  -Original Message-From: 
  [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of 
  Jackie ReidSent: Thursday, 15 April 2004 11:23 AMTo: 
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]Subject: [WSG] Constructive Criticism 
  please
  Hi all...
   
  if anyone has the time or the inclination could 
  they please have a decko at these pages and give me some constructive 
  criticism... like does it work at your end, any coding blunders etc! before i 
  go at it hammer and tongs and start filling the content in. (have validated it 
  ok)
   
  http://www.mockorange.com.au/mocksites/test/jugernaut/juganaut.html
  http://www.mockorange.com.au/mocksites/test/jugernaut/index.html
   
   
  css = http://www.mockorange.com.au/mocksites/test/jugernaut/css/juganaut.css
   
  Also when is a css doc too big and should be 
  divvied up into a couple of pages...
   
  ps: the links aren't functional as 
  yet.
   
  Thanks
   
  Jackie


Re: [WSG] Dynamically populating stylesheets?

2004-03-09 Thread Beau

Chris Blown said:
> 1. As Beau mentions dynamically generate the style sheet.
> 
>
> Not sure here, but method 1 might have caching issues, I've never tried
> this, so perhaps Beau can comment here.

you might run into some caching issues here, depending on the volume that
you're dealing with. again, using headers, you could work around this. you can
set a header with something like

header('Content-expiry: date here');

or something like that (can't remember the exact header declaration off the
top of my head) and just tell the UA to cache the output for a certain period
of time, so that even tho you're repeatedly calling cssmaker.php, the browser
should cache the output.

another option would be temporary filesystem caching on the server, which can
work quite well, where you write the css file once, then if it exists and is
under a certain age, just give that to the user rather that hitting the
database again. that can help on the server side a little :)

Beau
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RE: [WSG] Dynamically populating stylesheets?

2004-03-09 Thread Beau

Yep Seona, that's it.

You *might* get away without that header, but it's there to make it
technically correct, and make sure that your browser doesn't freak out,
because otherwise PHP will make the content appear (according to the header)
as text/html format I think.

Give it a go with CF if you like, just leave out the header and see what
happens - just make sure you have the type="text/css" in the LINK - that might
be enough to force the content type.

You'll want to check that in all browsers to make sure they all eat it tho :)

Beau

-- 
Beau Lebens
Information Architect
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Dented Reality - www.dentedreality.com.au
Information Architecture, Usability, Web Development

Seona Bellamy said:
>
> Just to make sure I understand you, Beau, the php code you show is the
> content of that cssmaker.php that you put in the href?
>
> Not sure if I can duplicate that with CF - it's that "header" bit that is
> the biggest problem I guess. Does anyone know if there's a similar function
> in CF?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Seona.
>
> -Original Message-
> From: Beau [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Wednesday, 10 March 2004 3:38 PM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: [WSG] Dynamically populating stylesheets?
>
>
>
> You can do this with something like PHP, just a script that does something
> like this
>
> 
>
>  header('Content-type: text/css');
>
> echo 'H1 { font-family: Arial; }
> // etc!
>
> ?>
>
> obviously, once you have something like that running, you can just change it
> so that the echo line pulls content from a database, then dumps it out,
> pretending to be a stylesheet :)
>
> HTH
>
> Beau
>
> --
> Beau Lebens
> Information Architect
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Dented Reality - www.dentedreality.com.au
> Information Architecture, Usability, Web Development
>
> Seona Bellamy said:
>>
>> Hi guys,
>>
>> Is this even possible? What I have is a site that gives people a chance to
>> set up their own information sections where they can record their own
>> content. I would like that an account holder can state which colours, font
>> sizes, font styles, etc they want for their section and have this
>> information gets recorded in a database. That's the easy bit, and I can do
>> that no problem. What I need then if that when a user navigates to a
>> particular section, the system pulls these values from the database and
>> populates the stylesheet with them so that the section displays in the
>> requested colours and styles.
>>
>> If it makes any difference, I'm working in ColdFusion.
>>
>> Of course, if this is just a pipe dream then I'll just have to sit down
> and
>> figure out another way around the problem. Id really prefer not to have to
>> use the selection form as a way for account holders to email me their
>> preferences so I can make them a new stylesheet if I can help it... :)
>>
>> Cheers,
>>
>> Seona.
>> ---
>> Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.
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>>
>
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Re: [WSG] Dynamically populating stylesheets?

2004-03-09 Thread Beau

You can do this with something like PHP, just a script that does something
like this





obviously, once you have something like that running, you can just change it
so that the echo line pulls content from a database, then dumps it out,
pretending to be a stylesheet :)

HTH

Beau

-- 
Beau Lebens
Information Architect
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Dented Reality - www.dentedreality.com.au
Information Architecture, Usability, Web Development

Seona Bellamy said:
>
> Hi guys,
>
> Is this even possible? What I have is a site that gives people a chance to
> set up their own information sections where they can record their own
> content. I would like that an account holder can state which colours, font
> sizes, font styles, etc they want for their section and have this
> information gets recorded in a database. That's the easy bit, and I can do
> that no problem. What I need then if that when a user navigates to a
> particular section, the system pulls these values from the database and
> populates the stylesheet with them so that the section displays in the
> requested colours and styles.
>
> If it makes any difference, I'm working in ColdFusion.
>
> Of course, if this is just a pipe dream then I'll just have to sit down and
> figure out another way around the problem. Id really prefer not to have to
> use the selection form as a way for account holders to email me their
> preferences so I can make them a new stylesheet if I can help it... :)
>
> Cheers,
>
> Seona.
> ---
> Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.
> Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com).
> Version: 6.0.605 / Virus Database: 385 - Release Date: 1/03/2004
>
> *
> The discussion list for http://webstandardsgroup.org/
> *
>
>

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Re: [WSG] Ways to minimise CSS file

2004-03-03 Thread Beau

James Ellis said:
> You could also divide your stylesheet up into different files - one for
> navigation, one for layout, one for headings etc etc - then link (or
> however you do it) them all in.

I would have thought that from a general performance perspective, splitting
the CSS into too many files would be a bad idea, since each one is going to
require an extra HTTP Request/Response to download. That extra traffic will
cost you bytes (and time), so if you need all that CSS on the page, you may as
well have it all in one file.

I normally only use separate files where I have a unique set of definitions
for an area of my site.

i.e. all files have general.css & print.css, some areas also include blog.css
(guess which ones :)

Just a thought.

Beau

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Re: [WSG] Javascript question

2004-02-16 Thread Beau

Hey Scott,

No offense, and not particularly helpful in this case, but *why on earth*
would you want to do something like that in JavaScript???

Any sort of thing like that, with large loops, and modified output based on
data that (I hope) is stored in a database is *definitely* better handled
server-side using something like PHP, or if you're into that sort of thing;
Cold Fusion or ASP.

Is there a particular reason why you want it done in JS? (Mind you - I am very
impressed at your code and having it work!)

Cheers,

Beau

-- 
Beau Lebens
Information Architect
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Dented Reality - www.dentedreality.com.au
Information Architecture, Usability, Web Development

scott parsons said:
>
> OK, so a different standard from the one we usually talk about
> I have this page
> http://positionrelative.com/snippets/jstest.htm
>
> Now if you visit the site you should see a huge list of suburbs, to
> which I am adding some letter headers for each letter. Sounds simple
> enough except that it takes far too long for the JS to work, and I'm
> stuck as to how to improve it.
> My js function is
>
> function recurseNodes(aNodes) {
> for (var i=0; i if (aNodes[i].nodeType == 1) {
> if (aNodes[i].tagName.toLowerCase() == "label") {
> //label found
> //get first character
> var c = aNodes[i].innerHTML.charAt(0);
> if (c != currentLetter) {
> //insert node for for new letter heading
> var newNode = document.createElement("h2");
> newNode.innerHTML = c.toUpperCase();
>
> aNodes[i].parentNode.parentNode.insertBefore(newNode, aNodes[i].parentNode);
>
> //for safari
> //var newNode2 = document.createElement("a");
> //newNode2.setAttribute("name", sPrefix +
> c.toLowerCase());
>
> //aNodes[i].parentNode.parentNode.insertBefore(newNode,
> aNodes[i].parentNode);
>
> //set current letter
> currentLetter = c;
> }
> }
> //recurse
> if (aNodes[i].hasChildNodes) {
> recurseNodes(aNodes[i].childNodes);
> }
> }
> }
> }
>
>
> The safari bit was for another additional function which has now been
> curtailed (I have very much the moving goalposts on this one!)
> If anyone could think of a better way to do this, or even an efficiency
> tweak I would be very grateful.
>
> p.s. this page is just a snippet so may be a little messy...apologies
>
>
> thanks
>
> scottbp
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RE: [WSG] W3C VALIDATORS

2004-02-08 Thread Beau

> The Internet should be a user's
> medium not an author's medium.

I totally agree with this one Mark, and for the record, I don't bother putting
any of the 'validates' icons on my site(s) because as you've said, most users
plain old don't care. If someone's interested, they can run my sites through a
validator, or check the code themselves pretty easily, so I don't force it on
them.

The 'dynamic icon' idea could be pretty nifty while developing tho - if you
could easily include it on all pages and have it display is validation state
while you were working on it, then just politely go away once you're done
(easy to do via templates).

Beau
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Re: [WSG] W3C VALIDATORS

2004-02-08 Thread Beau

I think you're semi-onto something Chris, and it actually wouldn't be all that
hard to make it yourself if you were really keen - you could have a script on
your own site which takes the URL value of the page, passes it directly to the
validator (via the querystring) and then parses the result page for keywords
(i.e. 'is valid' or whatever is says when your page validates) and then
display the appropriate image.

As you've mentioned tho - it will mean that every page that uses it will be
validated every time it's loaded, unless some sort of caching system is
implemented in parallel.

You *might* be able to do something 'cache-y' by relying on the 'Last
Modified:' header that a lot of servers use, so if it hasn't been modified,
then load a previous state for the icon, otherwise validate and display the
result. The problem here again is that you have all this required
communication going back and forth just to display a little icon :)

It'd definitely be a nice feature if you could download and install the
validation engine on your own server, and run the tests locally!

Cheers (now you've got me thinking...)

Beau

Chris Stratford said:
> You know, I have been wondering why W3C don't change their CSS &
> HTML/XHTML validators so that they work like this:
>
> You add the image to your website:
>
> http://www.w3c.org/validate_css.php"; border="0">
>
> that PHP link will validate your website via the REFERRER value in PHP.
> then the PHP script should return the image!
> Now if it validated - the image should be the TICK, and if it didn't
> validate, it should be an X.
>
> I know the obvious disadvantage - it would use a lot more processing
> than it does already.
> But I am sure they could implement some sort of Caching checksum, so
> that when that specific referrer has a diff checksum or whatnot it
> rescans.
> It would also delay the image load for a few seconds - but that's
> acceptable.
>
> The advantage would be that its instant validation without opening a new
> window.
> And if its an X you can click to see the errors.
>
> Maybe the Processing it would require is way too much - but its an idea!
>
> What do you think.
>
> -
> Chris Stratford
>  <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> www.neester.com <http://www.neester.com/>
> -
>
>


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Information Architect
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Information Architecture, Usability, Web Development
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Re: [WSG] Programmer's Challenge [Virus checkedAU]

2004-02-03 Thread Beau

And for extra points, the ability to specify an x-y screen coordinate to place
the cursor at, initiating a mouseover event before taking the screenshot??

Then you could say place the mouse at 210,452 (or whatever) and see the
mouseover effect (:hover) of an element on your page to make sure that works
as well.

you might need to allow different coords per browser as well, because they all
have different amounts of chrome, will lay the page out differently etc.

Beau


Nick Lo said:
>
> Since it appears that Browsercam is in the lead so far. How about
> shifting the challenge to coming up some Browsercam competition
> (Australian perhaps?) that does show below the fold, etc...
>
> How about it; BrowserCamOz or something equally original!?
>
> Just a late afternoon thought.
>
> Nick
>
>> The best shot we have to try is Browsercam, other than that, there
>> really isn't much more possible to do...
>
> *
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>
>


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[WSG]

2004-01-20 Thread Beau Lebens

To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
MIME-Version: 1.0

Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; CHARSET=US-ASCII

User-Agent: NuralNet WebMail Client




Hi Cameron,



I am currently using www.phpwebhosting.com and find them very good and very cheap. I 
am considering going to www.dreamhost.com and they look pretty darned good. One of the 
best things they offer that I want is IMAP, which phpwebhosting don't have.



phpwebhosting are very flexible tho, and you get unlimited subdomains, relatively 
unlimited transfers/databases and lots of storage, with more if you need it, so it's a 
tough call at this stage for me :)



oh yeah, and both have shell access which is critical for me :)



HTH



Beau



- Original Message -



Hi,



I was in the hunt for a good (cheap) web host.

Explanation and replies here:



http://www.themaninblue.com/writing/perspective/2004/01/21/



Thanks,

--

Cameron Adams



W: www.themaninblue.com



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RE: [WSG] PDA Browser Testing

2004-01-08 Thread Beau Lebens

Umm - actually, if you're connected to the 'net on your Palm, you can enter
a URL and browse away to your heart's content (Channels menu -> Open
Page...).

from memory the main restriction is that it requires an HTML meta tag in the
header of the document to tell it that it will be able to display the page;



other than that, it is a browser in it's own right, and can handle a fair
amount of the stuff that a normal browser can (albeit *much* smaller on a
Palm screen :)

Beau

// -Original Message-
// From: Miles Tillinger [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
// Sent: Friday, 9 January 2004 9:23 AM
// To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
// Subject: RE: [WSG] PDA Browser Testing
//
//
//
// AvantGo only allows you to sync with various websites that
// provide an AvantGo feed.  AvantGo is not a browser, it just uses
// the browser on your devices OS to display your AvantGo channels, AFAIK.
//
// -Original Message-
// From: Beau Lebens [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
// Sent: Friday, January 09, 2004 11:32 AM
// To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
// Subject: RE: [WSG] PDA Browser Testing
//
//
//
// // And also this one for Palm OS5 simulator, not sure if this
// has a browser
// // to test with though
// // http://www.palmos.com/dev/tools/simulator/
//
// If you can get that working, then you can install AvantGo
// (http://www.avantgo.com/) which will provide you with browser
// functionality,
// and as far as I'm aware that would be the most popular browser for Palm
// devices. With that installed, you can get it to browse content via your
// computer's connection.
//
// Beau
//
//
// *
// The discussion list for http://webstandardsgroup.org/
// *
//
// *
// The discussion list for http://webstandardsgroup.org/
// *
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//
//


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RE: [WSG] PDA Browser Testing

2004-01-08 Thread Beau Lebens

// And also this one for Palm OS5 simulator, not sure if this has a browser
// to test with though
// http://www.palmos.com/dev/tools/simulator/

If you can get that working, then you can install AvantGo
(http://www.avantgo.com/) which will provide you with browser functionality,
and as far as I'm aware that would be the most popular browser for Palm
devices. With that installed, you can get it to browse content via your
computer's connection.

Beau


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[WSG] Resizable Google

2003-12-16 Thread Beau Lebens

Hey All,

Don't know if anyone else noticed this, or if I'm really late to notice or
what, but I just realised that Google pages are now resizable using the Text
Size settings in Internet Explorer. They definitely weren't a couple months
ago.

I've posted a short note about it here;

http://www.dentedreality.com.au/notes/2003/12/16#Resizable%20Google

if you're interested.

Beau

--
Beau Lebens
Information Architect
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Dented Reality - www.dentedreality.com.au
Information Architecture, Usability, Web Development


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RE: [WSG] PHP Question...

2003-12-08 Thread Beau Lebens



that's 
a very valid one that i didn't mention simon :)
 
i had 
that exact same problem on my server, where my hosted site is configured to 
parse all files as XML and PHP (apparently) and so I had conflicts - ended up 
having to use something like this;
 
?xml version="1.0" 
encoding="iso-8859-1"?\n"; ?>
 
Beau

  -Original Message-From: Simon Jessey 
  [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]Sent: Monday, 8 December 2003 8:25 
  PMTo: [EMAIL PROTECTED]Subject: RE: [WSG] PHP 
  Question...
  Another thing to 
  consider is XML. Some people (myself included) create XML files on a regular 
  basis. The PHP short tag 
  The 
  problem doesn't usually arise, because the server strips the page of PHP as it 
  is being served; however, it is better to be safe than sorry, 
  eh?
  --Simon 
  Jesseybusiness: http://keystonewebsites.com/personal: http://jessey.net/blog/e: 
  [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
   
  
-Original Message-From: Beau Lebens 
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]Subject: RE: [WSG] PHP 
Question...

 
for compatibilities sake, you should always use the 

  -Original Message-From: Chris Stratford 
  [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]Subject: [WSG] PHP 
  Question...
  
   
   
  Wondering, what is the 
  difference between using:
   
  
  /* php code 
  */?>
   
  as opposed 
  to:
   
  
  /* php code 
  */
  ?>
   


RE: [WSG] PHP Question...

2003-12-08 Thread Beau Lebens




 
for 
compatibilities sake, you should always use the 
 
Beau

--Beau LebensInformation 
Architect[EMAIL PROTECTED]Dented Reality - 
www.dentedreality.com.auInformation Architecture, Usability, Web 
Development 

  -Original Message-From: Chris Stratford 
  [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]Sent: Monday, 8 December 2003 7:07 
  PMTo: [EMAIL PROTECTED]Subject: [WSG] PHP 
  Question...
  
  Hey People!
  Sorry me 
again…
   
  Wondering, what is the 
  difference between using:
   
  
  /* php code 
  */?>
   
  as opposed to:
   
  
  /* php code */
  ?>
   
  
  • Chris 
  Stratford• [EMAIL PROTECTED]• www.neester.com 
  
   


RE: [WSG] Targeting IE5

2003-10-09 Thread Beau Lebens
Ben, I totally agree, there's so much that can be done either using some
Apache rewrite magic - %{HTTP_USER_AGENT} + Regular Expressions = powerful
client detection or even just with some embedded PHP code or similar so that
different pages and/or sections of pages can be pulled in as required.

There are some totally amazing things that can be done with Apache if start
playing with content negotiation, authorisation and access control and
rewrite rules etc - it's a real eye opener and a whole new world of goodness
:)

Best to all,

Beau


// -Original Message-
// From: Ben Boyle [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
// Sent: Thursday, 9 October 2003 8:02 PM
// To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
// Subject: [WSG] Targeting IE5
//
//
// I would have thought the best way to target a browser (be it IE5
// or other)
// was content negotiation. Detect the browser and serve content in the
// appropriate format. Does anyone else get the feeling this technique is
// rarely used whilst cruder methods proliferate?
//
// IMHO, web servers can do a lot more than just serve files and should be
// exploited for all they are worth - and that's plenty. I feel this
// cornerstone of the web is oft overlooked, much to the detriment of the
// online experience when cruder technologies are called on to compensate.
//
// Maybe it's just too difficult for developers to get access to webserver
// configuration, or too tedious to produce content in multiple
// formats? Gotta
// weight that against the time and effort we've all invested in workarounds
// and hacks though ... The right tool for the job. One can't solve every
// problem with a hammer.
//
// cheers
// Ben
//
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// The discussion list for http://webstandardsgroup.org/
// *
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//
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RE: [WSG]Tables or DIVs / Spans?

2003-09-24 Thread Beau Lebens
Hi all,
along a simliar vein to this question, how's this one;

If you are designing a form/survey, would you also go for a table? It's not
*really* tabular data, you are using the table for layout/perhaps grouping
of elements more than anything.

I know we should be using things like fieldsets, tab order, labels and all
other wonderful form elements like that, but they are also compatible with
tables (except perhaps fieldsets to some extent...), but what's the verdict
about the overall layout?

I know some forms are easily re-designed to avoid tables, but others would
really struggle without some sort of rigid, grid-based layouts.

Where do we sit on this one?

Personally, I think I'd go for a table-based design if the layout was
particularly complex or I thought it required it, but I'd attempt to
redesign the form (if that was an option) so that this wasn't necessary.

Beau
--
Beau Lebens
Information Architect
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Dented Reality - www.dentedreality.com.au
Information Architecture, Usability, Web Development

// -Original Message-
// From: Adam Carmichael [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
// Sent: Wednesday, 24 September 2003 9:01 AM
// To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
// Subject: Re: [WSG]Tables or DIVs / Spans?
//
//
// Thanks for your feedback :)
//
// I thought td with class was correct for tabular data - I just needed some
// confirmation.
//
// James: I might do a chmod 100 on the php code. *grin*. then again i might
// not - i'd need to change root passwords or obfuscate to actually
// enforce it
// as I don't have any of encode or compile utilites (but now i'm
// getting off
// topic).
//
// - Original Message -
// From: 
// To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
// Sent: Wednesday, September 24, 2003 10:20 AM
// Subject: Re: [WSG]Tables or DIVs / Spans?
//
// *
// The discussion list for http://webstandardsgroup.org/
// *
//
//
//


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