On 16 jun 2005, at 04.23, Chris Kennon wrote:
Has anyone any idea if the FOUC in Safari 2.0 is remedied with
similar methods to IE?
Safari's FOUC was introduced in 1.3/2.0 and seems to mostly appear on
pages that have Google ads. Apple are aware of the problem, so I'm
hoping a fix will b
>Is there free online screen reader like Delorie Lynx Viewer available that
allows to test sites?
this one does:
http://www.yellowpipe.com/yis/tools/lynx/lynx_viewer.php
with regards
Steven Faulkner
Web Accessibility Consultant
National Information & Library Service (NILS)
454 Glenferrie Road
K
Alan Trick wrote:
Acording to the WHAT-WG the element does have semantic meaning.
I don't have the link though. They basically said that it was good for
things like 'small print' and such cases. I think is an unusal
case here and is meanigful and useful.
Alan Trick
I think that when we
Dmitry Baranovskiy wrote:
Sorry, what is FOUC?
Google is your friend...
But to help you on the right track, it's a "Flash of Unstyled
Content". Basically, the page displays as plain, unformatted
HTML, before the CSS is fully loaded. CSS kicks in after a while
and the page is then display
Lea de Groot wrote:
On Wed, 15 Jun 2005 19:23:12 -0700, Chris Kennon wrote:
Has anyone any idea if the FOUC in Safari 2.0 is remedied with
similar methods to IE?
You see it too? I thought it was an oddity of my setup!
No, I haven't found a way to get rid of it :(
Lea
Sorry, what
Nice site, 2 notes though.
You may want to add a:focus{color:white}, several of the links go
*completely* blue if you focus on them, a problem if your using tab a lot.
Also, there's a little problem in firefox on page to. I looks like a
float bug. It's probably firefox's fault but just letting yo
On Wed, 15 Jun 2005 19:23:12 -0700, Chris Kennon wrote:
> Has anyone any idea if the FOUC in Safari 2.0 is remedied with
> similar methods to IE?
You see it too? I thought it was an oddity of my setup!
No, I haven't found a way to get rid of it :(
Lea
--
Lea de Groot
Elysian Systems - I Underst
Acording to the WHAT-WG the element does have semantic meaning.
I don't have the link though. They basically said that it was good for
things like 'small print' and such cases. I think is an unusal
case here and is meanigful and useful.
Alan Trick
Matt Thommes wrote:
> Is there any reason at al
Hi,
Has anyone any idea if the FOUC in Safari 2.0 is remedied with
similar methods to IE?
CK
___
"An ideal is merely the projection, on an enormously
enlarged scale, of some aspect of personality."
Aldus Huxley
tee wrote:
Roberto, thank you for the link, too bad the installer for PC only. I am on
Mac.
If by Mac you mean OS X, rather than OS 9, have a look at this
http://www.apple.com/downloads/macosx/unix_open_source/lynx.html
Testing in web based emulators is nice, but they usually can't emulate
Hi
I realise you may all
become frustrated with first time web site
developers' problems, but please know that I'd really appreciate any
help you may be able to provide.
I'm developing my first
site - trying to teach myself css - and have
encountered some browser incompatablity mostly r
> I'm not sure if it is another version of Lynx with a free installer that
> you are looking for... I used the one you can find here:
> http://csant.info/lynx.htm
>
> Roberto
>
Roberto, thank you for the link, too bad the installer for PC only. I am on
Mac.
tee
*
>
> You can always install lynx yourself... binaries are available for most
> platforms.
>
Terrence,
Thanks and yes I aware of lynx, I tried to install once from source with no
success. Anything that requires me to run from Terminals destines to fail.
I was look for something similar to Del
>Is there free online screen reader like Delorie Lynx Viewer available that
allows to test sites?
this one does:
http://www.yellowpipe.com/yis/tools/lynx/lynx_viewer.php
with regards
Steven Faulkner
Web Accessibility Consultant
National Information & Library Service (NILS)
454 Glenferrie Road
Tee,
I'm not sure if it is another version of Lynx with a free installer that
you are looking for... I used the one you can find here:
http://csant.info/lynx.htm
Roberto
tee wrote:
Is there free online screen reader like Delorie Lynx Viewer available that
allows to test sites?
Delorie Lyn
Colin Steele
I would recommend not having ::Web Design References:: for 14 different
areas of web design. These should be made into the sub headings of
Usability, XML, Typography etc.
unfortenatuly I cannot control that, I just syndicate their feed
Bruce
An "About" page would be nice.
added to my
You can always install lynx yourself... binaries are available for most
platforms.
regards
Terrence Wood.
On 16 Jun 2005, at 3:16 AM, tee wrote:
Is there free online screen reader like Delorie Lynx Viewer available
that
allows to test sites?
Delorie Lynx Viewer required user to have a delo
Tom Livingston wrote:
Has any headway been made as far as hacks/filters go? I found the JS
and PHP solutions... is that it?
The .htc behaviour for IE is probably the slickest way around if you
want PNG24 support.
http://www.google.co.uk/search?q=htc+png
--
Patrick H. Lauke
___
Hi list,
yeah. this again...
Has any headway been made as far as hacks/filters go? I found the JS
and PHP solutions... is that it?
TIA
Tom Livingston
Senior Multimedia Artist
Media Logic
www.mlinc.com
---
www.browsehappy.com
**
The dis
Hi Bert,
You wrote:
Or what about simple normal every-day headings?
We can go up to 6 levels deep with them...
I guess it all depends on the application.
I think you nailed it--in a sense, **any** linear
sequence is a "list" whether or not clarity can
be helped by using markup to call out a
But I am getting the feeling that the reset button is not only a waste
of time, but in fact fairly user-unfriendly. ...
Seriously: how many people enter data into a form and go so completely
wrong that they want to erase everything they have just done and start
over new?
On the other hand, how
Title: Conferences on Standards and Accessibility
Hello, all. Hope this is not OT to the list. Is anyone aware of any conferences in the United States focused on accessible Web design with Standards? I know there are some good ones overseas in Europe, Australia, and Japan, but have found
Is there free online screen reader like Delorie Lynx Viewer available that
allows to test sites?
Delorie Lynx Viewer required user to have a delorie.html file in the server,
this is only good for my own project testing but sometimes I need to help
friends to test their sites.
Regards,
Tee
*
Hi Roberto.
As long as you can input the characters directly utf-8 is a big
time-saver. It makes for more readable code to boot. Since the demise of
NN4 it is supported on all browsers around.
If you use a web-based form to submit content and the page is declared
as utf-8, you can copy and past
Hi all
You can now listen to Doug Bowman -Design as a Standard- from the Reboot
7 conference in Copenhagen June 11th 2005
The audio file 46min. 47 sec. (.mp4 format / 49.2M) can be found at The
Internet Archive
http://www.archive.org/audio/audio-details-db.php?collection=opensource_audio&c
Bert, Patrick and all.
The issue of semantics, presentation and accessibility for
legislation is a really good example of the genuine social importance
of what people like members of WSG do.
The law is central to our society. We probably all know the maxim
"ignorance of the law is no defenc
Hi,
I’m trying to understand the pros and cons of different charset
encodings and I would like to know what your experience tells you about
this subject, notably:
* Unicode encoding (UTF-8) seems to be more efficient than ISO
charsets (iso-8859-1): It covers all the languages in a sin
On Wed, 2005-06-15 at 10:10 +0100, Patrick Lauke wrote:
> I think that this (particularly the "legal document" case) is a
> scenario in which we have to recognise that there *is* no widely supported
> semantic equivalent.
I'd agree with this statement, however, in terms of structuring your
content
Bert,
Or what about simple normal every-day headings? We can go up to 6
levels deep with them...
I guess it all depends on the application.
I think using headings is a very good suggestion.
In legislation, the numbered entries we are talking about are indeed
headings for sections, sub s
> Bert Doorn
> I don't have access to jaws or the like, but what about
> semantics? Is it an unordered list made to look like an ordered
> list, or an ordered list using the wrong element?
I seem to remember, from my days with JAWS 4, that it would be read
out as "List with 3 itemsbullet;
Paul Novitski wrote:
What about using ULs in this case? (That's how I originally marked up
my example; should have left it like that!) How would a screen-reader
read this:
1 - Aardvark
2 - Banshee
3 - Cicada
I don't have acc
At 12:54 AM 6/15/2005, Bert Doorn wrote:
G'day
Paul Novitski wrote:
I would argue that this is perfectly good markup & styling:
1 - Aardvark
2 - Banshee
3 - Cicada
and then:
ol li
{
list-style-type
i think Reset buttons can have their merits depending on the context of their use. think of an application where a user is Editing data in a form, not starting with a blank form!
- the user is wanting to change 2 fields in a customer record, an address and a phone number...
- they change an addre
G'day
Paul Novitski wrote:
I would argue that this is perfectly good markup & styling:
1 - Aardvark
2 - Banshee
3 - Cicada
and then:
ol li
{
list-style-type: none;
}
Question... How
At 05:05 PM 6/14/2005, Richard Czeiger wrote:
Wondering how we can get CSS to specifity the spearator used in ordered
lists (ie: the thing between the list item number and the value of the
list item). For example...
1.
a)
1 -
a:
I would argue that this is perfectly g
I hate them.
I can't even tell you how many times I have tabbed my way through a huge
form, got to the bottom.
tab, enter.
**realises its the reset button**
**smacks myself in the head**
I often click the reset/cancel button - but I have NEVER EVER wanted to!
They are not useful at all!
Sinc
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