Hi Elle,
It might sound silly but I first found out about MS Smart Tags
yesterday. I found an article on ALA about them from 2001.
Just wanted to ask, does anyone know what happened with them since?
And would the meta tag: work? or is it still necessary?
Even MS eventually had to accept it wa
Michael MD wrote:
>
> btw that "99.99%" was never intended to be used as some kind of
> reliable statistic!
> so please don't quote it as such!
> - it was only a guess about something - perhaps I should have just
> said something like "most"... :-)
Yep, I know that. The point is that too often w
Terrence Wood wrote:
> John Foliot wrote:
>> semi-credible stats showing that 4% of users cannot (do not?) support
>> JavaScript [http://www.thecounter.com/stats/2007/March/javas.php]
>
> Granted, this appears to be more reliable than 99.9% - but isn't
> javascript required in order for thecounter
John Foliot wrote:
semi-credible stats showing that 4% of users cannot (do not?) support
JavaScript [http://www.thecounter.com/stats/2007/March/javas.php]
Granted, this appears to be more reliable than 99.9% - but isn't
javascript required in order for thecounter.com to gather stats, or do
th
My good people,
It's really a matter of simple common sense. Yes, we want to cater to
the largest possible audience. But in all reality, unless our site in
question is the first web page someone has ever encountered, they'll
understand that whether they click, press enter or any other possible
John Foliot wrote:
> semi-credible stats showing that 4% of users cannot (do not?) support
> JavaScript [http://www.thecounter.com/stats/2007/March/javas.php]
Granted, this appears to be more reliable than 99.9% - but isn't
javascript required in order for thecounter.com to gather stats, or do
the
John Faulds:
> Surely people recognise links enough that they don't need to be told to
> click every single one?
I agree. The verb ('click here', 'go to' etc) really shouldn't form part
of the link text.
kind regards
Terrence Wood.
***
Hi John,
Do you ever find that your solution causes you page layout problems
(that is, including the uri as the link text)?
When I first encountered “web standards” folk, it was suggested to me
that including uris as link text wasn’t ideal for accessibility reasons,
because of screen readers
James Leslie wrote:
> On a related note, though not involving galleries, I find a lot of
> our clients want to have linked text along the lines of "Click here
> for more details on product x". I have managed to fairly much insist
> that we always use the entire sentence as a link to show context,
>
Doesn't "More details on product x" mean exactly the same thing as "Click
here for more details on product x" if the whole line is a link? Surely
people recognise links enough that they don't need to be told to click
every single one?
On Fri, 20 Apr 2007 03:10:12 +1000, James Leslie
<[E
Good day all,
I am seeking informations about rendering a fluid site visit, I mean avoiding
the most possible "waiting time / loading animation". For an online shop
which will contain 4 "modules" on the same page :
* Long list menu with a window decorate image for every text link rollover
* man
Yeah, it was quite wild as I remember ... The other day I was playing
with Eric's CSS Charts and wanted to have the actual data in table,
repositioning them somehow for display. It was rather hacking the
elements to the position.
--
Jan Brasna :: www.alphanumeric.cz | www.janbrasna.com | www.w
Hi,
It might sound silly but I first found out about MS Smart Tags
yesterday. I found an article on ALA about them from 2001.
Just wanted to ask, does anyone know what happened with them since?
And would the meta tag: content="true" /> work? or is it still necessary?
Cheers,
Elle
*
On a related note, though not involving galleries, I find a lot of our
clients want to have linked text along the lines of "Click here for more
details on product x". I have managed to fairly much insist that we
always use the entire sentence as a link to show context, rather than
just the "click h
Michael MD wrote:
> interesting discussion
>
> I get a lot of mobile phone users here.
> "click" would definately not be a suitable word to use on any page
> mobile phone users are likely to look at.
>
> ...however I might use that word on pages that require javascript
> such as those that us
On 19/04/07, Nick Fitzsimons <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
A DTD is perfectly capable of specifying that an attribute is
required: it uses the syntax #REQUIRED. The spec for the name
attribute of the input element states that it is #IMPLIED, not
#REQUIRED, therefore it is not correct to say that the
On 19 Apr 2007, at 12:03:22, liorean wrote:
On 16/04/07, Nick Fitzsimons <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Name and ID serve two different purposes. ID is used to identify the
element's node in the document [1]. Name is used to identify the
element's value in the form submission posted back to the ser
On 16/04/07, Nick Fitzsimons <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Name and ID serve two different purposes. ID is used to identify the
element's node in the document [1]. Name is used to identify the
element's value in the form submission posted back to the server [2].
OTOH, according to the HTML 4.01 Str
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