Archive for May, 2008

Web Accessibilty WOW Tech Minute Project with Brent Norris, Web Developer

Posted by Fred on May 28, 2008
Web Accessibility / Comments Off

Greetings WOW Members and Web Professionals everywhere! Bill Cullifer here with the World Organization of Webmasters (WOW) and the WOW Technology Minute.

Today s podcast is a continuation of the coverage of the topic of Web accessibility. To assist the me with this topic, I am reaching out to Brent Norris, Web Developer from the great state of Hawaii.

Brent Norris has been a long time supporter of the WOW organization and the WOW Technology Minute. Additionally Brent?’s a veteran Web professional specializing in Web 2.0 websites and I am reaching out today to a request to share his thoughts on the topic. More specifically, I?’ve asked Brent to walk us through the specific steps that he takes when considering Web accessibility for his clients. I also asked him to take on the project of assessing the WOW Technology Minute website with the goal of aligning it with best practices and covering the topic from an educational perspective complete with a written report and audio interviews of the process.

Good afternoon Brent and thanks for the continued support. To hear Brent?’s response complete with his plans for the WOW Tech Minute Web accessibility project check out today s podcast at WOW Technology Minute

Stay tuned this week for more coverage on Web Accessibility and other great resources. Thanks for listening and watching today s WOW Technology Minute.

Today s Technology Minute is sponsored by the Adobe Corporation and its Creative License eSeminar Series for Web Professionals.

Join Adobe software experts to learn how to use the tightly integrated tools available in Adobe® Creative Suite® 3 Web Premium. Web eSeminars are designed for web designers, web developers and anyone interested in enhancing their workflows, and learning new tips and tricks and take place April 23, 2008 – May 21, 2008

Adobe Seminars Check it out!

Transcript:

BILL CULLIFER: Greetings WOW Members and Web Professionals everywhere! Bill Cullifer here with the World Organization of Webmasters (WOW) and the WOW Technology Minute. Today?’s podcast is a continuation of the coverage on the topic of Web accessibility. To assist the me with this topic, I am reaching out to Brent Norris, Web Developer from the great state of Hawaii. Brent has been a long-time supporter of the WOW organization and the WOW Technology Minute. Additionally Brent is a veteran Web professional specializing in many Web 2.0 applications and websites. And I?’m reaching out to Brent today to request him share his thoughts on the topic. More specifically, I?’ve asked Brent to walk us through the specific steps that he takes when considering Web accessibility for a client. I?’ve also asked him to take on the project of assessing the WOW Technology Minute website with the goal in mind of aligning it to best practices, and covering the topic from an educational perspective complete with a written report and audio interview of the process. Good afternoon Brent and thanks for agreeing to this interview.

BRENT NORRIS: Aloha Bill, thanks for having me on.

BILL: Brent, can you share with the listeners of this podcast what you have in mind for the Web accessibility project of bringing the WOW Technology Minute site up to best practices?

BRENT: Sure Bill. Well as you know, we?’ve checked in with this topic time and time again from Web accessibility, Section 508 compliance and html standards, and our research has kind of been mixed. But we?’ll embark on it again and what we?’ll do is we?’ll do this within the context of what?’s important to a webmaster, generalist, so that they might be able to get a little closer to that Holy Grail of Section 508 compliance. And along the way what we?’ll do first is we?’ll analyze the wowtechminute.com site, evaluate it, where it stands now with tools that we?’ve already talked about in some of your other podcasts, as well as some of the tools and resources at section508.gov. And then we?’ll make some corrections if we can, to try and make the site more accessible for persons with disabilities. And make recommendations. So those recommendations will be for the other webmasters and generalists out there that are interested, trying to make their sites more accessible.

BILL: Today?’s WOW Technology Minute is sponsored by the Adobe Corporation and its creative license eSeminar series for Web professionals. Join Adobe software experts to learn how to use tightly integrated tools available in Adobe Creative Suite 3 Web Premium. The Web eSeminars are designed for Web designers, developers and anyone interested in enhancing their workflows and learning new tips and tricks. And all of this will take place from April 23 – May 21, 2008. Check out all the great links on the WOW Technology Minute website

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Web Accessibility-Interview with Jon Gunderson, Ph.D. University of Illinois

Posted by Fred on May 20, 2008
Web Accessibility / Comments Off

Greetings WOW Members and Web Professionals everywhere! Bill Cullifer here with the World Organization of Webmasters (WOW) and the WOW Technology Minute.

Today s podcast is a continuation of the coverage of the topic of Web accessibility. To assist us in better understanding this issue from a higher education point of view, I am on the phone with Jon Gunderson, Ph.D. Coordinator Information Technology Accessibility Disability Resources and Educational Services at the University of Illinois.

Dr. Gunderson provides training, developmental tools and is working on publishing a guide on Web accessibility best practices. I asked Dr. Gunderson to share with the listeners of this podcast what Web professionals need to know about Web accessibility and what they can implement today.

To listen to the six minute podcast visit today?’s WOW Technology Minute

Thank you for listening and watching today?’s WOW Technology Minute.
Today?’s WOW Technology Minute is brought to you by Web Pro Training

Transcript:

BILL CULLIFER: Greetings WOW Members and Web Professionals everywhere! Bill Cullifer here with the World Organization of Webmasters (WOW) and the WOW Technology Minute. Today?’s podcast is a continuation of the coverage on the topic of Web accessibility. To assist us in better understanding this issue from a higher education point of view, I am on the phone with Dr. Jon Gunderson, Coordinator Information Technology, Accessibility Disability Resources and Educational Services at the University of Illinois. Good afternoon Dr. Gunderson, and thank you for agreeing to this interview.

DR. JON GUNDERSON: Thank you, glad to be here.

BILL: Dr. Gunderson, you provide training, developmental tools and you?’re working on publishing best practices regarding accessibility. Can you share with the listeners of this podcast what Web professionals need to know about Web accessibility and what can we do today to provide best practices?

DR. GUNDERSON: Well our approach here with accessibility, when I first got involved with accessibility on campus ten years ago, kind of a standard approach people would take to accessibility would be to find some online tools, I think this is still a model with a lot of developers. They find some tool that will evaluate their website, for accessibility, give them this report, and then they would look at the report and try to fix the problems that were identified in the report. We found that very problematic from a number of different perspectives. One is that it doesn?’t address the inherent mark-up that people use for accessibility. Most of the automated tools out there check for only a very few accessibility requirements. Most of them have lists of what I call manual checks, like there?’s alt texts for images, maybe labels for form controls, but if you don?’t use headers on a page, or not properly, these tools consider that a manual check. So if you don?’t have any headers, hey, your page may be okay. So when we looked at that, we didn?’t think that model would lead to really more accessible websites. People might fix them up a little bit but their time and effort is probably going to be wasted because the overall website still won?’t be very accessible.

So our approach here was what we call accessibility by design, and piggyback that on top of Web standards. So kind of the mantra was, okay, your current website isn?’t very accessible, but when you?’re ready to redesign it, come to us or take one of our training classes that we offer and learn about accessible design, the things you should put in your page, and we piggybacked those techniques on top of Web standards so kind of the overall idea is everybody wins. The Web developers win because they?’re using Web standards. They can more efficiently create and maintain their websites. People with disabilities win because a lot of the accessibility features are just built in to how the website is created. And also administrators win because the cost of putting in accessibility at this time is fairly minimal. In fact I say to people, it probably saves them money.

We have an example on this campus, Dr. Brigett works for our office of publications, public affairs, and when he got involved, when we got involved with him on accessibility and making the campus home page accessible, his idea of creating a web page was drawing a picture in Photoshop or Illustrator and using the save to Web feature, which basically just broke up the image to little, bitty pieces so it could be sufficiently downloaded as a picture. Well, it?’s very difficult, if not impossible, to make that process accessible. So we tried to talk to him about Web standards and using css and the structural mark-up of html. It took a little time to learn those skills, but his next version of the home page was, you know, 100 times more accessible than the previous picture version. It was also faster to download, easier to maintain. But it was after he did that, what he said, I think that really made an impact on me, he said, “I learned these skills because of accessibility, but I use them because they?’re better Web design.”

BILL: Interesting, great story. I appreciate that. And in effect that long-term saves time, saves money.

DR. GUNDERSON: Right. That?’s the big issue now. When the Web was a wild, wild west everybody was just dumping money into it, but now that it?’s become more of a commodity and a production, people are more concerned about cost.

BILL: Fair enough, and good point. And well said Dr. Gunderson. I appreciate that. What specifically, can you give us one tip, you know, if the listeners of this podcast wanted to know, “What can I do today to start this process and make my sites more accessible?”

DR. GUNDERSON: Well, I think one of the first things that we ask Web developers to do is to look at heading structure on their webpage and use headings in a hierarchical manner. So we reserve the H1 tag to uniquely title a page, so that people as they move between webpages can navigate to the H1, especially if I?’m a speech user, and know how this page is different than another page. And that if you have navigation bars, that you use header marks, header level 2s, either right before the list of links. And there are techniques in css to hide the header if you don?’t want the visual rendering to have it. But that allows people using speech especially, to be able to find where the navigation bars are. And then if you can use header levels 2s and 3s structurally within the page people can, especially speech users, can now go find the main topics easily. And keyboard-only users can also use those headers to navigate, so to, more efficiently to links on a page. So for example if I?’m using the Opera browser, it has a built-in header navigation function, the W and S keys. I?’m a keyboard-only user, I?’m not a screen-reader user, but I can?’t use the mouse for some reason. If I have headers on my page, I can use the S and W keys to navigate close to the link I want and then use link navigation to get to the specific link under that topic. So you can go from having to type 40 to 50 or 60 keystrokes, tabbing through a page, to maybe 5 or 6 using header navigation and the tab.

BILL: Very interesting and I appreciate your perspective on that Dr. Gunderson. Great information, great resources. We appreciate your time today. Bill Cullifer here with the World Organization of Webmasters (WOW) on the telephone with Dr. Jon Gunderson, Coordinator Information Technology, Accessibility and Disability Resources and Educational Services at the University of Illinois. Thank you so much for your time today Dr. Gunderson.

DR. GUNDERSON: Thank you.

BILL: Today?’s WOW Technology Minute is brought to you by webprotraining.org, offering a complete solution for all your Web professional training needs including WOW certification options. Check it out at webprotraining.org.

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Web News Monday-MySpace Less Social and Web 2.0 Developer Survey Picks

Posted by Fred on May 18, 2008
Web Pro News / Comments Off

Greetings WOW Members and Web Professionals everywhere!
Bill Cullifer here with the World Organization of Webmasters (WOW) and the WOW Technology Minute.

It s Web News Monday and here s what s shaping our Web world this week.
MySpace still dominates the social networking scene but fewer people are visiting and their spending less time according to news sources published this week. The U.S. dominates the mobile social networking arena.

In other news, Web 2 Developers favor a mix of Web and pc capabilities for designing front-end interfaces. Combining Internet base-based and PC-based computing resources for Web 2 applications was the top choice according to poll reported by Evans Data Corp. Microsoft and Google are in a dead heat for the most popular widget or gadget category at 22.9% of those surveyed.

Stay tuned this week for more coverage on Web Accessibility and other great resources. Thanks for listening and watching today s WOW Technology Minute.

Today s Technology Minute is sponsored by the Adobe Corporation and its Creative License eSeminar Series for Web Professionals.

Join Adobe software experts to learn how to use the tightly integrated tools available in Adobe® Creative Suite® 3 Web Premium. Web eSeminars are designed for web designers, web developers and anyone interested in enhancing their workflows, and learning new tips and tricks and take place April 23, 2008 – May 21, 2008

Adobe SeminarsCheck it out!

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Web Accessibility -”tips that you can use today” with Professor Mark DuBois

Posted by Fred on May 16, 2008
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Greetings WOW Members and Web Professionals everywhere! Bill Cullifer here with the World Organization of Webmasters (WOW) and the WOW Technology Minute.

Today s podcast is a continuation of the coverage of the topic of Web accessibility. To assist us in understanding this issue from a “what can we do today” perspective, I am on the phone with Professor Mark DuBois, from Illinois Central College.

Mark, good afternoon and thanks for agreeing to the interview. Mark, as you know thousands of Web professionals are tasked to manage a number of complex technical, designs and Web business topics everyday. In short, they are not always going to be Web accessibility specialist. As a result, can share with the listeners of podcast a couple of specific examples that Web professionals need incorporate when considering Web accessibility for their clients?

Mark. you also serve as the Director of Education for the WOW organization and we are collaborating yon the development of a short course on the topic of Web accessibility the listeners what that course might entail and how much will it cost?

To listen to the four minute response check out the WOW Technology Minute at: http://www.webprominute.org

Today?’s WOW Technology minute is sponsored by the “Voices That Matter” series of Conferences. This years Voices That Matter Web Design conference is a unique event brought to you by New Riders, the leading publisher of Web design books and resources—and home to the most popular Web design authors, trainers, and speakers. This year?’s Voices That Matter: Web Design Conference will take place June 10-13, 2008, in Nashville, Tennessee.

Voices That Matter Conference

Check it out today! http://www.voicesthatmatter.com/webdesign2008/

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Web Accessibility Internet Browser for Multimedia

Posted by Fred on May 14, 2008
Web Development / Comments Off

Greetings WOW Members and Web Professionals everywhere! Bill Cullifer here with the World Organization of Webmasters (WOW) and the WOW Technology Minute.

Today s podcast is a continuation of the coverage of the topic of Web accessibility. While researching this topic a bit this week, I stumbled across a Accessibility Internet Browser for Multimedia from IBM that I’d like to bring your attention. Check out: WOW Technology Minute

The Accessibility Internet Browser for Multimedia is a tool that enables multimedia content on the Internet to be enjoyed by people with visual impairments.

As you know first hand the use of multimedia content has increased dramatically over the last few years, but people with limited or no vision have not been able to fully enjoy the benefits of these advances. This new multimedia browsing accessibility tool provides people with visual impairments a level of control more comparable to a sighted person using a mouse. For example, while enjoying a streaming video, visually impaired people can now select the play button by simply pressing a predefined shortcut key instead of searching in the content for buttons that control the video.

According to IBM, users can also adjust the volume of an individual source in order to identify and listen to different sound sources without losing track of the screen-reading software because of the sound of a video. If a content creator wants to provide a voice narrative for a video, he can write a text script as a piece of metadata; the tool adds the audio descriptions by using text-to-speech engines. Future plans for extending this technology include enabling flexible audio speed control and contributing this work to an open-source development project. Such contribution will accelerate development and adoption of tools that make Web-based multimedia content accessible to the visually impaired.

How does it work? (Compliments of http://www.alphaworks.ibm.com/tech/aibrowser)

Usually, people with visual impairments browse Web pages using either screen-reading software (such as JAWS for Windows) or a voice-enabled browser (such as IBM® Home Page Reader). However, these tools cannot handle multimedia applications properly. Visually impaired users cannot see the multimedia control buttons that appear on a screen. In addition, the audio of a streaming video — which automatically starts playing after the page is loaded — interferes with the synthesized assistive voice generated from screen-reading software, a vital assistant for visually impaired users. Furthermore, most multimedia content operates only with a mouse rather than a keyboard, making it virtually impossible for visually impaired people to appreciate multimedia content.
IBM Accessibility Internet Browser for Multimedia is built on top of the Eclipse Rich Client Platform, and it works as a stand-alone application. After a user opens a Web page, the tool automatically analyzes the multimedia content embedded inside the page. Then the tool lets the users control the multimedia content — letting them play, stop, or pause the videos, change the replay speed, adjust the volume, and so on — by using simple predefined shortcut keys.

The tool also has a function for providing an alternative text-based interface for the content based on XML metadata. By using metadata, the tool can reorganize or simplify the original content and can provide additional information or navigation methods. Although someone must create the metadata manually, once created, the usability of the site is drastically improved. Usually, multimedia content is designed only for sighted users with mouse operations, so it is impossible or difficult to understand the visually rich content with a voice interface and or to control it by using a keyboard.

This tool also provides functions for adding audio descriptions to movies based on XML metadata by using text-to-speech engines. Audio descriptions are usually created by content creators as an additional sound track for a movie. For example, we are presently using an existing text-to-speech engine to add audio descriptions. Not only developers and creators, but also volunteers are able to add audio descriptions easily and cost-effectively.

The system can also provide additional information or navigation methods, thus allowing users to enjoy the content using their preferred methods.

The tool can work with screen readers (JAWS and Window-Eyes) by making it speak as well as it might work as a self-talking browser.

1. Is IBM® Accessibility Internet Browser for Multimedia available on Linux®?

No; it runs only on Windows® XP or above.

2. Can I change the text-to-speech (TTS) engines used in IBM Accessibility Internet Browser for Multimedia?

This tool supports Windows Speech API(SAPI)5. After installation of additional TTS engines, please select your preferred TTS engine in the preference dialog box.

3. Can IBM Accessibility Internet Browser for Multimedia work with screen-reading softwares?

The tool supports JAWS screen reader versions above 7.10 and Window-Eyes versions above 5.5.

4. Which language does the tool support?

Currently, the messages and descriptions are available in English and Japanese. Users can read the target content based on the languages of the TTS engines or screen-reading software.

5. What kind of multimedia content embedded inside Web pages does the tool support?

This version supports Flash (Versions 5-8), Windows Media, RealMedia, and Quick Time.

Today?’s WOW Technology Minute is sponsored by the Adobe Corporation and the “Getting Started with Dreamweaver and CSS Seminar Tour”.

Learn everything you need to know about building compelling websites using Adobe Dreamweaver CS3! Whether you?’re totally new to building websites, or migrating from GoLive or a previous version of Dreamweaver, this fast-paced one-day seminar brings the entire workflow together—from design and prototyping through development and testing—using easy-to-understand examples from a designer?’s point of view. Most importantly, you?’ll learn the key to cool, functional, and flexible Web layouts: CSS—how it works, and how you can use it to your advantage.

For more information or to register for seminars in Los Angeles (May 29), New York (June 4), Washington DC (June 17), Chicago (June 24)
and Boston (June 26) go Adobe Seminar Tour

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Web Accessibility – Interview with Kel Smith Principal, Anikto LLC

Posted by Fred on May 12, 2008
Web Accessibility / Comments Off

Greetings WOW Members and Web Professionals everywhere! Bill Cullifer here with the World Organization of Webmasters (WOW) and the WOW Technology Minute.

Today s podcast is a continuation of the coverage of the topic of Web accessibility and I?’m on the phone with Kel Smith Principal, Anikto LLC a Web accessibility consulting firm from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Good afternoon Kel and thanks for agreeing this interview. Kel, you contacted WOW in regards to the interview on the topic of Web accessibility with T.V. Raman at Google. Can you expand on the comments made by T.V. Raman and can you share with the listeners of this podcast what Web accessibility means to you?

Kel is a knowledgeable professional with some great things to share about Web accessibility, usability and universal design. To listen to the three minute interview complete with some great links to Kel?’s consultant and blog website Anikto.com check out today?’s WOW Technology Minute at: http://www.webprominute.org WOW Technology Minute

Today?’s WOW Technology minute is sponsored by the “Voices That Matter” series of Conferences. This years Voices That Matter Web Design conference is a unique event brought to you by New Riders, the leading publisher of Web design books and resources—and home to the most popular Web design authors, trainers, and speakers. This year’s Voices That Matter: Web Design Conference will take place June 10-13, 2008, in Nashville, Tennessee.

Voices That Matter Conference

Check it out today! http://www.voicesthatmatter.com/webdesign2008/

Transcript:

BILL CULLIFER: Greetings WOW Members and Web Professionals everywhere! Bill Cullifer here with the World Organization of Webmasters (WOW) and the WOW Technology Minute. Today’s podcast is a continuation of the coverage of web accessibility and I?’m on the phone with Kel Smith Principal, Anikto LLC a Web accessibility consulting firm. Good afternoon Kel and thanks for agreeing this interview.

KEL SMITH: Thank you, thank you for having me.

BILL: Kel, you contacted the WOW in regards to the interview on the topic of Web accessibility and T.V. Raman at Google. Can you expand on the comments made by T.V. Raman and can you share with the listeners of this podcast what Web accessibility means to you?

KEL: Certainly. I was most struck by one of T.V.’s comments having to do with ensuring that websites, or really any projects designed, can be made without regard to assumptions on who the user will be that winds up benefiting from it. For example, he had said, “When you make a website don’t necessarily assume that a person is going to have a certain-sized monitor, or a certain-size screen or that they’ll be abe to be totally able in terms of vision, color blind.” And I started thinking about that in terms of Universal Design principals. For those who don’t know, Universal Design is a broad-spectrum approach which is intended to benefit everyone, including but not limited to people who have disabilities. And the second principal of that is secondary use, meaning that the design should accommodate a wide range of individual preferences and abilities. Universal Design is largely derived from an architectural term, a good example is a building called [?], I believe in New York, they do things architecturally. For example they have carpet that gets darker as you approach a door, I think they have small changes in the carpet so that as you approach a corner you can sort of feel that the corner is going to be there so you can make a turn, safely. They also have small shelves to the right of doors so that someone in a wheelchair who wants to fish out their keys can put their bags down and be able to access that easily.

BILL: Yeah, it seems to me that Web accessibility has additional benefits outside the scope of just web-users. Universal design is a science that’s been around for a number of years that has a broad range of benefits to a variety of individuals including all users.

KEL: Absolutely. It’s also important to keep in mind the usability accessibility. We include websites that comply with various criteria of Section 508 but we also want to be sure we test them with real users and ensure those variances from user to user and even within the same disability, are covered. The idea behind Universal Design is to make sure that the design is useable across multiple situations and scenarios and multiple people. For example we want to ensure that usability is improved such that it?’s common practice to put a skip navigation link, at the top of a page, so that a screen reader, which reads back a page in sort of a robotic voice, doesn’t read the navigation on every single page when a user clicks on a respective link. The problem with that is users with disabilities may not, and blind users in particular, may not understand the concept of navigation because they’ve never actually seen a map. So the idea of skip navigation is to read not just the context of an accessible website. It may comply with criteria, but it may not get the context. So it?’s better to put in items such as skip command content. It’s important to use an adjective name as the modifier for the word content, so that the screen reader doesn’t read the word “content” as “content” as in happy. So it?’s not just making sure that the page technically complies, it?’s also making sure that it meets a certain usability standard, which you’re going to find out if you’re testing with real people.

BILL: Yeah, I understand that. I appreciate that perspective Kel. You’ve obviously been consulting on this topic for a while. For the listeners of this podcast that might have an interest in consulting services provided by your organization, where might they go to get more information?

KEL: The best place would be go to the website first, it?’s www.anikto.com. It’s the Greek word for “open.” I just started this consulting firm, just this year actually. And there’s a link to contact me directly and there’s also a link to go to the Anikto blog which is where I write about what is going on in the accessibility world and basically helping people get along better with this tricky landscape.

BILL: Excellent. I appreciate that, and your time today, and your perspective. Very valuable and very insightful. We certainly appreciate it. Bill Cullifer here with the World Organization of Webmasters (WOW) and the WOW Technology Minute on the phone with Kel Smith, Principal from Anikto LLC. Thank you for your time today Kel.

KEL: Thank you. I’m very honored. Thanks very much.

BILL: Today?’s WOW Technology Minute is sponsored by the Voices That Matter series of conferences. The Voices That Matter Web Design Conference is a unique event brought to you by New Riders the leading publishers of web design books and resources and home to the most popular web design authors, trainers and speakers. This year’s Voices That Matter Web Design Conference will take place June 10-13, 2008 in Nashville, Tennessee.

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Web Accessibility Interview with T.V. Raman, Research Scientist at Google

Posted by Fred on May 08, 2008
Web Accessibility / Comments Off
 
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Greetings WOW Members and Web Professionals everywhere!
Bill Cullifer here with the World Organization of Webmasters (WOW) and the WOW Technology Minute.

If you’ve been following along with this months podcast, than you?’re aware that we’ve been covering the goings on at the seventeenth annual WWW2008 Conference in Beijing. In addition to delivering WOW education and training and covering the keynotes, I had the pleasure of meeting and interviewing a handful of the delegates attending the conference.

For today’s podcast, I have the distinct pleasure of covering the topic of Web accessibility with T.V. Raman, Research Scientist at Google.

T.V. is legally blind and in addition to being a truly nice guy T.V. has a real handle on the topic of the need for Web accessibility and its business benefits as well. In fact, as a result of this interview, I?’ve decided to dedicate the remainder of this month?’s podcast to the topic and will be interviewing a wide variety of Web professionals for the remainder of the month of May.

Here are the questions that I asked T.V. Raman:

•Are we progressing as an industry with respect to Web accessibility?
•Why is this issue important and significant?
•How can we explain the benefits to Web accessibility to our customers and can you explain the benefits to business?

Make it point to turn up your speaker volume and hone in on this must listen to interview with T.V. Raman from Google. Check out additional resources from T.V. Raman at the Google Webmaster Blog located at: Google Webmaster Blog

Thank you for listening and watching today?’s WOW Technology Minute.

Today’s WOW Technology Minute is brought to you by WebProTraining.org check it out at: WebProTraining.org

Transcript:

Transcript of WOW Technology Minute – Interview with T.V. Raman
Located at – http://webprominute.org/429/Web-Web-accessibility-interview-with-tv-raman-research-scientist-at-google/
Aired – 5/8/2008
Length – 10:02

BILL CULLIFER: Greetings WOW Members and Web Professionals everywhere! Bill Cullifer here with the World Organization of Webmasters (WOW) and the WOW Technology Minute. If you’ve been following along with this month?’s podcast, then you?’re aware that we?’ve been covering the goings on at the seventeenth annual WWW2008 Conference in Beijing. In addition to delivering WOW education and training, and covering the keynotes, I had the pleasure of meeting and interviewing a handful of the delegates attending the conference. For today?’s podcast, I have the distinct pleasure of covering the topic of Web accessibility with T.V. Raman, Research Scientist at Google.

T.V. is legally blind and in addition to being truly a nice guy, T.V. has a real handle on the topic of the need for Web accessibility and its business benefits as well. In fact, as a result of this interview, I?’ve decided to dedicate the remainder of this month’s podcast to the topic and as a result I will be interviewing a wide variety of Web professionals for the remainder of the month of May. Make it a point to turn up your speaker volume and hone in on this must-listen interview with T.V. Raman from Google.
Good afternoon T.V. and thank you for agreeing to this interview.

T.V. RAMAN: Thank you for inviting me to this.

BILL: You bet. My question to you, T.V., you specialize in accessibility issues and that’s an area of strong interest to you, I’m curious to know, have we progressed as a profession, as an industry, on the topic of accessibility? Are we making any specific headway?

T.V.: I believe we’ve made a lot of progress. The fact that someone from your field, who is mostly focused on the webmaster field, actually does an interview on accessibility, tells us how far we’ve come. Because ten years ago if you had said accessibility we would?’ve probably said, you know, is the website accessible from some corner of the world versus another. So I believe it’s come a long way. And the way I look at it you can always ask, is the cup half full or half empty? But we as an industry should all congratulate ourselves on the fact that, first of all, the cup is a lot bigger. So if the cup is a lot bigger, if it’s half empty, there’s a lot more to fill. And if it’s half full than there’s a lot we‘ve already filled. So, I tend to be an optimist about such things and so I think we’ve come a long way. We also created challenges as the Web evolved, but that’s part of, that’s part of me working in this field fun. There are more things to solve.

BILL: Yeah, I appreciate that. Excellent perspective. I’m really pleased to hear that we’re making progress. WOW is a Web professional organization that has a focus on education and it’s been our goal to educate individuals, teachers, those that create design, make websites today, the importance of that. And that leads to the next question. I represent a lot of practicing professionals that are certainly already aware or understand, but I also represent the thousands of individuals that consider this a brand new field. And those that teach them, that are not necessarily aware of the significance and the importance of accessibility for that audience. Could you address accessibility from your point of view and why is it significant to consider in the first place?

T.V.: So, I used to say this before I went to Google, the world’s most influential that I knew is actually the Google search bot. And accessibility today is made extremely complicated by people who do that field for a living, with lots of guidelines and “you must do this and you mustn’t do that.” And so at first flash it might appear to be an extremely intimidating prospect, to answer the question “Is my large website accessible?” Or “What should I be doing?” But if you’re going to boil it down, it actually, accessibility of the Web goes back to taking the Web to its basics. The Web as a [indecipherable] term and professed by a lot of us, was all about when you put out your information, you shouldn’t be making any assumptions about the user who is going to come look at it. You shouldn’t be assuming that he has a color display, you shouldn’t be assuming that he has a large monitor, you shouldn’t be assuming that he has broadband, whatever. What has happened, and because the Web has created a lot of accessibility challenges, is in our rush to sort of deploy to the Web and get what we think of as the immediate goals that we want to achieve, sometimes we lose sight of that larger perspective, which is where a lot of accessibility challenges come from. So my advice to people in this field who are interested in looking into accessibility, yes the field is complex when you sort of investigate it and ask, for the deaf user, for the blind user, for the [indecipherable]-impaired user, for the reading disabled user, what should I do? It can get rather intimidating. But if you go back to basics, the Web as designed, is intrinsically designed to be viewed by everyone, used by everyone, accessed from everywhere. And as long as we stick to that popular goal, when doing the next level detail of what you need to do, it actually becomes a lot easier.

I like to point people in your field on some of the articles I’ve been running on the Google webmaster blog about accessibility and crawl-ability and sort of kill two birds with one stone. What can you do to both ensure that your site is useable, viewable by a widest possible audience and at the same time also make it easy to search. Because one of the reasons I started doing this was I realized that people were spending a lot of money on search engine optimization. And as someone who has special needs and has a vested interest in accessibility, I looked at it and said, “Can we actually start explaining to people, not accessibility in terms of laws and guidelines, which are important, but also accessibility in terms of the bottom line?” So if people really cared about optimizing their sites for search engines, they’ll go out, and I’m not making this up, a lot of those optimizations also positively impact what I call the long tail of users. So, you know what the long tail of content is as a webmaster, it‘s those 80 percent of pages that are accessed by 20% of users. The long tail of users I think of as users with special needs because each one of us is different. And so if you start optimizing your site for that long tail, you make it more crawl-able, more useful and ultimately a better site.

BILL: Excellent, very well said. And thank you for expanding on that because I represent, that was one of the questions I had, I represent a lot of Web professionals that have customers that they need to educate as to the value proposition of accessibility and I think you’ve done a very good job of explaining that. The other side of that coin is there are certainly, just to summarize if I may, there are certain business reasons why small business people that have an interest in developing sites, or medium or large enterprise websites for that matter, is that it provides with better search capabilities hence providing them with a better indexing of, a more marketable website. Would that be a fair way of summarizing that?

T.V.: Yes, absolutely. The site becomes more discoverable. So if you sort of again, come down to brass tacks as a webmaster, when you put out content, why are you putting it out? You’re putting it out so that it gets viewed. How are people going to view it? They’re going to come with whatever user-agent they use, whatever technology they use. And so the fewer assumptions you’ve made, you are better off. The next level, let’s say you create your wonderful masterpiece, but then you hide it behind a flashy front page, say done in Macromedia flash or something. And so people come to the front page of yours, know about your site, click on that, see this nice animation and then see your content. But, today most people search on the Web and if it’s hidden behind a piece of flash content it’s probably not gotten crawled and so the person typing a bunch of keywords into any search engine is probably not going to find your site, which means you sort of lost something. And so, the example I give people is as webmasters we sometimes think of our sites as this fancy building that we are putting together and we create this really nice front lobby with this beautiful set of stairs going up with marble pillars everywhere. But most people on the Web are likely to jump in through the 15th floor window. So I’m not saying don’t provide that beautiful façade for your site, do put on a good front, but be aware that most of the visitors to your site will not come in through the front door. They will parachute through the ceiling, that is they?’ll come in through the 15th floor window, make sure that you’re providing them as well an equally good experience and overall make sure that they can actually parachute into your site, through some search engines.

BILL: Excellent. Makes a very good business case and I appreciate the perspective on that. In addition to being the right thing to do, for accessibility, for those that are hearing or visually impaired. So I certainly appreciate your perspective on that. T.V. thank you. This is Bill Cullifer with the World Organization of Webmasters WOW here at the 17th annual WWW Conference in Beijing, China. Thank you so much T.V. Raman from Google.

T.V.: Thank you.

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WWW2008 Beijing-Interview with Professor Mark DuBois, ICC

Posted by Fred on May 07, 2008
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Greetings WOW Members and Web Professionals everywhere! Bill Cullifer here with the World Organization of Webmasters (WOW) and the WOW Technology Minute.

Today s podcast is a continuation of the coverage of the WWW2008 event last week in Beijing. To provide us with a summary of the event, I had the pleasure of interviewing Professor Mark DuBois, from Illinois Central College and WOW?’s Director of Education.

Mark participated in many of the sessions and keynotes and as a result he has a unique perspective on the value of the conference. Knowledge gained from the conference will allow us to report back to WOW members and Web professionals via this podcast and WOW?’s educational outreach to high schools and colleges worldwide.

Check out the three minute interview at: WOWTechnologyMinute

Today s podcast is sponsored by the Webmaster Survival Guide. Check out all of the great resources and links at: WebmasterSurvivalGuide

Transcript:

BILL CULLIFER: Greetings WOW Members and Web Professionals everywhere! Bill Cullifer here with the World Organization of Webmasters (WOW) and the WOW Technology Minute. Today’s podcast is a continuation of the coverage of the topic of Web accessibility. To assist us in better understanding the issue from a “what can we do today” perspective, I am on the phone with Professor Mark DuBois, from Illinois Central College. Mark, good afternoon and thanks for agreeing to this interview.

MARK DUBOIS: Well Bill, thanks for having me. I look forward to it.

BILL: You bet, thanks. Mark, you know, thousands of Web professionals are tasked to manage a number of complex technical designs and Web business topics for their clients everyday. And sure, you know, they’re not always accessibility specialists. And as a result, I’d like for you to share with the listeners of this podcast a couple of specific examples of what Web professionals need to incorporate when considering Web accessibility for their clients today.

MARK: Okay, in a nutshell I think the best thing that any practicing Web professional can do is make sure that their sites adhere to Web standards and where possible they separate presentation and content and that they also understand how individuals that have various difficulties, how they navigate websites. They can make some fundamental changes. I’ll just give you a real simple example here. This comes courtesy of Professor Jon Gunderson over at the University of Illinois. And in an example he was using in class a couple of weeks ago he mentioned about a survey. And this was a webpage, contained a number of like a lickert scale, essentially, but I think there were nine entries. And each one of the radio buttons had a number assigned to it so it was, technically, it met all the accessible standards and it would have passed any of the automated validation, accessibility validation routines. But if an individual was actually trying to use this particular form, what they would encounter is, well here’s the initial question and then they would listen to the audio browser go through and give them the numbers one, two, three, up to nine, followed by the numbers one, two, three, up to nine and be listening to that over and over. So although it was technically accessible, it clearly wasn’t useable.

BILL: Very interesting, thank you for sharing Mark. I can see where that would be very useful to understand and be able to eliminate. Let me ask you a question again Mark, you’re serving also as the director of Education for the WOW organization and we’re certainly grateful for that. And to that end, we’re collaborating on the development of an additional short course for the webprofessionaltraining.org website and I’m curious to know, could you share with the listeners of this podcast, on the topic of Web accessibility, what we might expect out of the short course for Web accessibility?

MARK: Certainly. I think as I had mentioned previously, one of the top things is to understand how people actually use the Web. If they’re relying on assistive technologies how they actually work with websites. I think that’s a key understanding. And then we get into some of the specifics, slight modifications you can make. For instance, if you’re using JavaScript you can incorporate onfocus and onblur event handlers, you can incorporate keyhandlers, onkeypress and so forth and tasks for various keys. It doesn’t require a lot of extra coding, but you can do some rather interesting things that will help people out. Understanding how people navigate via headers, how they use the tab key for instance. How they navigate through links. All of those would be aspects that would be included in the course.

BILL: Yeah, fair enough. And Mark, for that audience that necessarily is not pursuing Web accessibility as a full-time position, but part of their, you know, ditty-bag, if you will, of skills that they need to be proficient as a Web professional, would you say, what length of time do you have in mind for this short course and what kind of a cost do you anticipate?

MARK: Well I’m thinking that the course would run somewhere between two and four weeks, depending on how much time people have to spend on it. And like most of the WOW courses we’d probably be talking less than a hundred dollars for it.

BILL: Yeah.

MARK: So I’m trying to keep it as affordable as possible.

BILL: Sure, sounds good. And enough time for me to really get my head around and understand what I need to do as a designer, developer, webmaster, in the accessibility world.

MARK: Exactly. Something that, in the same that today you’re building a site you take into consideration issues like security and so forth, just basically understanding what’s involved, why it’s helpful to have fluid design on your webpages and that sort of thing, as you build your templates.

BILL: Yeah, fair enough. I thank you for that Mark and then again all for the support you’ve provided the WOW organization for years. Bill Cullifer here with the World Organization of Webmasters (WOW) and the WOW Technology Minute, on the phone with Professor Mark DuBois from Illinois Central College. Thanks for your time today Mark.

MARK: Well you’re welcome Bill, I enjoyed it. Thanks for asking.

BILL: Today’s WOW Technology Minute is sponsored by the Voices That Matter series of conferences. The Voices That Matter Web Design Conference is a unique event brought to you by New Rider, the leading publisher or Web design books and resources and home to the most popular Web design authors, trainers and speakers. This year?’s Voices That Matter Web Design Conference will take place June 10-13, 2008 in Nashville, Tennessee.

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WWW2008 Media Coverage-Keynote by Dr. Harry Shum, Corporate Vice President Microsoft Search Product Development

Posted by Fred on May 05, 2008
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Greetings WOW Members and Web Professionals everywhere! Bill Cullifer here with the World Organization of Webmasters (WOW) and the WOW Technology Minute.

Today s podcast is a continuation of the coverage of the WWW2008 event in Beijing. For day three of the event, I sat in on the Microsoft Keynote presented by Dr. Harry Shum, Corporate Vice President.

The title of the Dr. Shum s keynote was “Taking Search to New Frontiers” and the abstract went something like this:

Today s search engines not only have become one of the most important services on the Web but are also driving the development of next generation computing platform for the global Internet economy. In addition to connecting people to information at the speed of light with the use of automatic algorithms, search technologies are also revolutionizing many other aspects of people’s lives, including shopping, commerce, entertainment, travel, health care, and social activities.

Dr. Harry Shum first introduced Microsoft s latest research and product development efforts toward building an infrastructure for webscale data management and data analysis to better structure the Web. He also talked about how MS will take Web search further into these new frontiers and how our efforts will empower people to do things that were not possible before.

Special thanks to Professor Mark DuBois for the following notes from the Microsoft keynote:

•Search is still at its infancy
•Search is not a battle it?’s a war
•Current search engines took advantage of keywords today pushing boundary of keyword model
•Phenomenon explosive growth of content more and more user generated content, also multimedia content (challenging few words), unprecedented challenge in scale
•Web becoming dynamic, interactive place for users social networking people want to interact
•Long way to go 40% unanswered queries, 50% require refinement for searches
•Need to understand semantics this is right way to go. How can this be extracted

The crowd was introduced to a video search demo that MS research Asia been heading up. Although China s firewall posed some challenges the results looked pretty amazing.

Also, MS is working on a research project entitled Guanxi. The demo was all about relationships people oriented search. How we are related to other people and organizations and locations and skills. Who I am is contained in these relationships. For additional details, I shot a couple of minutes of video and audio, check them out in a raw and unedited format at the WOW Tech Minute http://www.webprominute.org

For your information more info about Libra can be found at:
http://libra.msra.cn/

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Google Booth Interview with Edward Chang, Director of Research Google China

Posted by Fred on May 01, 2008
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Greetings WOW Members and Web Professionals everywhere! Bill Cullifer here with the World Organization of Webmasters (WOW) and the WOW Technology Minute.

Earlier last week, I shared some of the goings on and some great links from the Google keynote at the WWW2008 conference in Beijing. For today?’s podcast, I stopped by the Google booth to take a closer look at some of the great stuff they had on display.

Google?’s one of those companies that just keep getting better. In fact, in looking around the exhibit hall here in Beijing, Google was the one company that just seemed to get it.

The booth was well staffed, the most accommodating with request for interviews complete with the best of show when it came to actual deliverables for Web professionals.

For example, they had live demo?’s of their:

•Open Social a cool Google Gadget,  that allows you to build apps that easily interact with your friends and colleagues (see http://code.google.com/apis/opensocial/)

•Google Maps API, Google Earth, Street View-Where you can you can virtually explore city neighborhoods by viewing and navigating within 360-degree scenes of street-level imagery (see http://google-latlong.blogspot.com/2007/05/introducing-street-view.html)

Code Game in Java and C++

I?’d like to give a shout out to Lisa McCracken, Events Manager at Google for organizing all of the great resources and for todays interview with Edward Chang, Director of Research Google China.

For the two minute video interview check out today s WOW Technology Minute at: http://www.webprominute.org

Today s Technology Minute is sponsored by Concentric offering small business and shared web hosting solutions.

Check out the FREE WEBINAR: Combating Spam! May 13, 2008 11:00am PST Where will be discussing “Perimeter Email Protection” as an email security solution that can protect your business from spam, viruses, directory harvesting,

For more information and registration information visit: http://www.joinwow.org/education/webinars/

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