My idea of accessibility

Posted on   June 12th, 2010

Make stuff accessible! This has become a general dogma in the web. Rightfully so. This is particularly true when working for public institutions, since they are bound by law to be accessible from as long as 2002. And yet, if you do a tour through the websites of councils (Ajuntaments), province administrations (Diputacions), ministries and so on, it will only make you laugh (or cry). It is a law no one knows how to enforce.

Impaired/disabled people, users accessing through different architectures, platforms or reading software, machines trying to classify your webs, spiders, search bots, they are usually denied access to most websites content. I find it to be specially outraging for impaired people, since they are no less citizens nor content consumers than others and yet they’ve got no other alternative of access.

Sadly enough, if you are just a normal content creator and try to understand what the WCAG2 regulations are about, you will probably end up crazy. In my real life, I try to tackle accessibility as a philosophy for doing stuff. Most of the principles are the same my parents told me when I was a kid: Tidy stuff up, be organized, be clear,… If I create some content, I’ll try first to express it clearly and organize it (index, sitemaps, categories, tags, clear titles, beautiful permalinks). When that’s done, I’ll try to give as many ways of access to it as possible (HTML Standards, RSS feed, MP3 reading, etc.). Of course, I’ll take it into account in all details I code, for example if I insert an image I’ll provide it with an alternative description (in case someone can’t see it, or it is not rendered). If I post a link, I’ll provide it with a title (so it displays a tooltip indicator of where I’m taking the user). If I insert a script, I’ll wonder and handle the usage-case in which the user can’t interpret it. All of this should not be considered once I finishing my work, but right away while I’m doing it. As my mother used to tell me, stuff is extremely easy and simple when you address it right away and you make it become a habit, if you leave it for later, it will pile up and be an unbearable burden.

All this thoughts came to me today while I was thinking of the nice and clean design of Marcelino Llano’s website (he is a user experience engineer). Why not all blogs give the possibility to listen to the posts instead of reading them? After all, it takes nothing to read the post after writing it, you do it anyway to check your spelling… I’ll start with my own =)

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Semàntic Podcast

Posted on   June 7th, 2010

I haven’t been particularly active recently, I’m actually preparing myself for the last exams I (might) ever do in my university. Tough stuff! Nonetheless, I’ll be back on (working, learning and posting) next month! In the meantime, I’d like to present the new podcast in which I happen to participate. It is called Semàntic. Unfortunately for the English reader, it’s only in Catalan (my native language) and can be found in http://semantic.cat.

I had the idea of creating this podcast after being repeatedly disappointed by the little choice of podcasting we have in Catalunya. I’m kind of addicted to many American and British podcasts and I always thought I’d like to have some of those in my own language… so what the hell, I talked with some colleagues, Jordi and Masumi, and they (surprisingly) found the idea interesting, so that’s how Semàntic was born, in our uni’s bar. We’ve only recorded 4 episodes but it has already shown some success. People in and out of our university is subscribed and follows our episodes. We got our feet wet quite unprofessionally, but we’re improving over time, and we hope to do a lot more!

Of course, we have a Rails3 website, a Sinatra Wiki (ingeniously built by Jordi), we coordinate ourselves through Talker and record with the help of some Samson unexpensive condenser microphones.  So if you’re interested in technology and computer science, and you understand Catalan of course, don’t hesitate to subscribe to Semàntic Podcast!

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