Tuesday, January 31

Accessibility rules...

..but at what cost to usability?

I work in web and multimedia design. Bodies like the W3C have lots of great guidelines and practices to help make sure that content produced for the web is usuable, legible and in the best format it can possibly be in for the most possible people in the potential audience. All of which is great—and a positive activity I embrace. This is not a post about them—but about those who misquote them, or misinterpret their rules to make sure their projects seem like they really are accessible to pretty much everyone when in fact they are not.

Image of a braille screen reader in use beneath a QWERTY keyboard
The W3C offers a great benchmark for good web authoring practice. Ask any good graphic designer and they'll say a lot of what the W3C promotes in terms of desing is really just a fully formulated version of what they were doing with text on the web anyway. The guidelines make sense and are a good thing for the web in general.

Where things get muddied is when developers like ourselves are hired by clients who want to tick all the ‘W3C compliant’ boxes without really thinking about whether making everything ‘accessible’ will in fact make their project ‘usable’. Keen to be seen to be 'doing something' for [insert PC term for someone not with 100% eyesight or motor skills here], they impose blanket restrictions without thinking about how these will affect the ninety-whatever percent of people who would use it in its ‘normal’ mode. So things get compromised to the point that it stops working well for most people and acceptably for the rest — and becomes something that only works marginally for everyone. How is this better? Can anyone tell me? You shouldn't ignore minorities — but neither should you compromise the whole for them. If all sofas were designed so that the smallest of sitters could put their feet on the floor, then how comfortable would they be for the majority of sitters?

Another thing that has started to happen is that the W3C rules become something that the client uses as the ‘de?nitive guide’ to what is right and wrong with any designs you produce. One click of an eydropper and they can rubbish your efforts.. So if it doesn't tick all the boxes - ergo - it is no good. Anyone in design will tell you that although there are rules they exist as a basis for form rather than the absolute. Clients often think that throwing the W3 book at a designer is a good way of getting accessible content but they are kind-of missing the point; designers have to persistently tweak, bend, and break the rules of typography, layout, grid structure colour theory on a daily basis not only to help with legibility and form but to aid the aesthetic attractiveness of something — making someone want to read something that might be a bitter pill in a less sympathetically rendered form. Removing this layer of skill, or craft, strips things back to the bare minimum and promotes simplistic not simply elegant solutions.

Sadly - the playing of the ‘aesthetics card‘ by a designer is usually misunderstood as 'arty fluff' and not considered important when they're wielding the crudeness of the WC3 rule-book in your face. ‘It's not important...’; ‘Look! — The book says this about your colours, this about your fonts. It must be true - I read it in the W3C textbook...’

It seems people want to reinvent the wheel. Does your browser resize text? Of course it does — and if you’re someone that needs to do that you probably already know how so why have ‘bigger text‘ buttons cluttering up your interface? If your flash-based learning environment resizes based on window size — then why spend a third of your budget writing content that re-sizes to a larger size in a fixed window? If your operating system supports system-level magnification, then why retro-fit it into your applications? It's a bit of a no-brainer but we do it all the time; Rocket-science to get down to the shops.

All of this stuff is commonly asked for by clients and not really needed on any computer system built in the last decade. So why does it get asked for? Why are the commissioning people so ignorant—happy to bleed away all the money for a project solving accessibility ‘problems’ that don't need solving? All the money spent on these labour-intensive workarounds is money that could so easily be spent solving the real problem which is purposing content properly for the specific user.

I think there needs to be less of a politically correct, face-saving, faddish and binary response to the notion of accessibility in the mainstream by those who commission or edit digital content. Sprinkle in a little more trust in the skills of designers and developers too and maybe things might start to move into a time where the all-singing, all-dancing information-for-everyone utopia promised with this idealism can actually get some legs.

Only when the notion of streaming ways of delivering content so that users with specific needs get things tailored for those needs rather than shoe-horned into generic ‘able-bodied-but-with-big-text’ templates (as is most often my brief), will things start to improve. Perhaps blind people are actually really sick of listening to endless lists of button names read out in a Joshua-Falken voice? Did anyone ever ask? Or think of an alternative? Perhaps there are better audio-based ways of interfacing with a computer and retrieving information that mean they get the most efficient UI and also means that the sacrifices usually made do not impede the use of more standard interfaces for more standard users. I think I'm saying ‘One size does not fit all’.

As it is there will never be enough budget to create truly accessible multi-media for multiple types of people until the money starts getting spent on new ways of accessing content rather than simply blowing up text to unreasonable sizes or allowing the user to change a font or a colour.

Only then will a more informed way of commisioning, authoring and developing digital content for everyone become something that is truly possible.

The W3C
A List apart - measured Web Design articles and discussion.
Webdesign Times

Monday, January 30

Adult Lego

Image of a Mule utility constructed from LegoShould these people grow up?

Found this lovely model of the ‘Mule’ from word-of-mouth summer hit ‘Serenity’ whilst looking for something else on Flickr.

There seems to be a huge community of adults making accurate Lego space/robots/etc — and being really anal about it too— buying specific bricks in bulk from eBay and so forth; But the question must be - is this normal? The models are definitely cool — but is playing with Lego something one should grow out of? Or is it fine?

I’m not sure. Seeing these models definitely fills me with nostalgia of the buzz of building the lasest space-craft — and even mild urges to join them — but is this simple innocent creativity or is something a bit wrong?

Perhaps Douglas ‘I'm an artist now as well’ Coupland knows?

Examples of adults building Lego here at the Brickshelf | Buy Lego in bulk

Sunday, January 29

Warm

Image of the fire we had tonightToasty Coal

We had a fire tonight. It’s damn cold and one radiator isn’t working. It doesn’t need bleeding - it seems to be on a different pipe loop to the others. Very strange. Anyway. Nice to have the facility for a real fire every once in a while.

Saturday, January 28

Hollywood’s image of ‘Britain’

Image of dodgy set and Union Jack overkill in Ep12 Season 2 of LostGood Grief!

I watched episode 12 of season 2 of ‘Lost’ yesterday. It was a very ‘Charlie-centric’ episode charting the fall of his band Drive-shaft and looking more deeply into Charlie’s relationship with his brother.

Unfortunately, the producers were a little worried their viewers might have forgotten Charlie is from the UK, and decided to make sure the viewers really didn't have any chance of forgetting his nationality. It was appalling. Union Jack robes worn at the video shoot, a blue-screened backdrop of Battersea Powerstation at the video location, more Union Jacks in his flat and perhaps worst was them all sitting round drinking tea out of bone china cups and saucers. I mean really. What made this even more bizarre was how the advert they were filming was for ‘Diapers’; Anyone worth their salt knows—of course—that they are in fact called ‘Nappies’ in the UK.

Add to that the terrible ‘Manc’ accent his mum had (not for the first time in Lost), and the location for ‘Brixton Tube’ that looked like the Bronx-set they have on the lot in L.A. (complete with left-hand drive cars), this had to be a low point in a declining series. More Sawyer please... He's the only thing worth watching it for anymore.

Friday, January 27

Tune of the day: Dave Clarke

The ‘Baron of Techno’

Been listening to an old essential mix of his from ’94. Thumping minimalism being just the mantra for the Flash production this morning. I probably appreciate this kind of music more now than I did then being more of a ‘hands in the air... breakdown... snare roll house’ person - at least going out - at the time.

Makes me think of what he could have done at the time with those very same records if he’d had something like Ableton Live. Ten four-to-the-floor-Detroit-loops-at-once anyone?

Throughout this mix there are loads of ‘serious’ sounding samples saying things like ‘For those who know the Difference - The Baron of Techno - Dave Clarke!”, and "the bombastic techno sound of...." which are making me giggle more than a little. Elitist nonsense or irony... You decide!

(mix taken from a DVD-r of about a milion retro 1FM essential mixes bought for next-to-nothing on eBay).

Thursday, January 26

5cI2488I_3 4N'/0n3?

L33T Scrabble tiles — Genius!
Linky™

Bouncing Dogs

Dogs, a trampoline, lasers, a high-speed shutter and banging French Techno... Does it get much better?

Was sent this link to an amazing video by Joshua Blankenship (American creative-type-person) today. Tune is by Vitalic. I thought the dogs were gonna get sliced up for a moment.. (Phew! The poor doggies!)

See the video
See even more videos

The IT Crowd

New Comedy starting next friday!

The ingredients list — Richard ‘You know nothing of The Crunch’ Ayoade, Graham Linehan, Chris Morris et al — makes it look like a promising show. Let’s hope the I.T. jokes aren't too hackneyed. Got to be better than ‘Attachments’ though. I shudder to think how that show launched David ‘Smarmy and Not Very Funny’ Walliams’ career.

Typical Scene:
“Oh crap - we’ve lost our whole website in some sort of hardware failure”
“.....Oh No!”
“Don’t worry - I've got it all backed up on this here floppy-disk”
“.....Yay!”


Shocking stuff!

Go to Official Site
Go to Channel 4 Microsite

Wednesday, January 25

Experimental font

Who can resist writing swear-words with celery?
Not me it would seem....

Picture from late last year; Soup making or a stir-fry I think.

Tune of the day: Kelley Polar

Mmm nice minimal-subliminal-electro-disco-vocal-music!

Kelley Polar did the string arrangements on the ‘Metro Area’ LP and that can only be a good thing. There’s apparently a new LP out in the spring but this one - ‘Love Songs of the Hanging Garden’ is quality stuff. Has been soothing me with the headphones on working from home today. Nice nebulae photo on the cover too.

Launch a player (I recommend listening to ‘Black Hole‘ first then going over to buy it at Bleep.com (link in sidebar—>)

Oh and as a special treat some here are some nice nebulae photos - taken with the Hubble space telescope I think: Here.

Tuesday, January 24

The Bumps

Do the council listen when you email them?
Maybe they do! I sent one to Islington Council about a dangerous tarmac bump in the shade of the main-line rail bridge over Holloway Road last week that had been left by lazy gas engineers. Hit it on a smallwheel bike and 'ouch' - you’d be over the bars and under a SUV.

Anyway - today - it was gone. I felt a small swell of pride riding home tonight when I thought of the people not having to swerve into traffic. And how I might have had something to do with it. Or not.

Bishop of Durham

My mum in Durham cathedral last Saturday.
The hats were optional :)

Old-School Typography

Looking like something from the 1950s (in a cool sort of Saul Bass kind of way), this hoarding design by Rainey Kelly Campbell Roalfe/Y&R is for a new Virgin Airlines route to Dubai starting in March.

The arabic apparently reads as ‘Soon...’;
And it looks like a plane...Sweet!

Cold Commute

Okay so after that introduction let’s try a proper post.
(The other two ‘cheated’ to be before this one...)

Fanfares? No don’t - there’s nothing very remarkable to report today apart from getting back in the weblog-way and doing a bit of custom CSS to make it my own. So today was my first ride of the year where there was actual bona-fide frost on the road. Ooh Slippery! Somehow it was not frosty by the new Arsenal/Emirates footy stadium though; Just the usual slurry all over everywhere.

A bit worring when you consider the site was a municiple waste-disposal facility in it’s earlier incarnation. I wonder what amazing bacteria I navigate through on a daily basis?

I read the full story about the mini-tragedy that was ‘The London Whale’ this morning. Sadder to me than perhaps it should be.

Plus - Ooer - the Canadian Conservatives got in last night.
Will they be getting jiggy wi’ Bush? Let’s hope not.

Tuesday, January 17

Tune of the day: Cagedbaby

Cagedbaby ‘...Will see you now’

Kinda reminiscent of Röyksopp; Signed to Norman Cook’s label. Wonderful cover photo from Glastonbury 1971 by Paul Misso.

Photo is entitled "Holy Smokes" I wonder if my dad knew either of these ‘groovy vicars’? Somerset isn't exactly far from Chepstow (where my folks lived at the time...)

Anyway - Tuneful and happy music for a dark January afternoon.

Cagedbaby Website

Sunday, January 15

A ride around Clissold Park

Avoiding the weekend cabin-fever creep Jo and I marshalled the courage to get out into the cold and have a pootle around Clissold Park on the bikes this afternoon...

Nice day too... I got to wear my new fleece (toasty-warm) and on the way back attempted our first ‘Pop-in’ on new neighbours nearby —‘Sid’ and Nancy — who weren’t in...

Never mind... We got out of the house and the cardiovascular felt pretty good.

Uncle!

Photographic evidence of my impending Unclehood! (Well ultra-sonic).
‘Baby’ will be due mid-late July; Congratulations to Beccy and Owen!...

Sunday, January 1

Web-log Mk2.

Not really sure how to ‘start’ the ball rolling with the first entry on a new web-log but this isn’t really new - it’s just been lying dormant for a couple of years so let’s not have a big fuss.

So — Yay! — It’s back!
And it should be part of the fabulously interesting and informative Raleigh Twenty site which might be as accessible and ‘CSS-lite’ as this one if I get it all together.

Check back soon for sporadic musing on life, bikes, design, and music (probably)...