That Standards Guy



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That Standards Guy is the online persona of Karl Dawson, a web developer living and working in Ipswich, England.

I'm a member of the Guild of Accessible Web Designers and the Web Standards Group and team member at Accessites—an awards site to recognise accessible and usable websites.

I specialise as a front-end developer and worry about the minutae of semantic (X)HTML and CSS, accessibility, microformats, typographic rhythm and grid design. I also care about the user experience and remind myself constantly of visitor site goals when working with clients and their aims.

That Standards Guy is proudly powered by WordPress using my own “StrictlyTSG v3.0” theme. Site Policies.

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Archive for November, 2007

November Pulse

Surely this is the last we’ll hear about CSS frameworks? Jeff Croft kicked up something of a bun fight at the CSS Coral with his post “What’s not to love about CSS frameworks?”. A huge response in the comments and elsewhere in the blogosphere with a lot of people confusing their distaste with Blueprint’s treatment of grids and the idea of a framework as a collection of snippets and common CSS techniques that can be reused on multiple projects.

A bumper crop of links saved to del.icio.us this month with some great articles on design and user experience. Jared Spool has a great two-parter for describing 7 Critical Considerations for Designing Effective Applications and Patrick McNeil has a series of articles ongoing at the moment exploring the Principles of Design in an easy to understand fashion complete with real-world examples. In case you missed it, Bruce Tognazzini was interviewed by e-consultancy.com. Some really interesting stuff from Apple’s 66th employee and founder of their Human Interaction team.

I don’t know who gave the other the idea, or maybe it was coincidence, but both Boxes and Arrows and Blue Flavor released some good articles on getting started in information architecture, building the UX dream team and getting hired an area I am very keen on exploring and using. Jakob Nielsen made it into my del.icio.us links this month with an overview of recent research in Intranet information architecture.

In the familiar territory of web accessibility and markup techniques, Steve Faulkner of the Paciello Group examined the support (or lack thereof) for fieldset and legend in screen readers. It’s poor, but you knew that would be the case anyway. Steve’s conclusion is important though:

…the poor support in software such as Window Eyes must not stop developers using these elements or accessibility practitioners recommending their use. Their use can make it easier for a wide range of disabled users to fill out forms. In order to improve accessibility for all disabled users, web standards must be adhered to so that developers can code for accessibility with confidence. It is the assistive technology vendor’s job in these cases to fix their implementations.

Further highlights from this month’s del.icio.us links:

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New theme

Well here it is. A fixed-width 960px layout. Yes, you read correctly - a fixed-width 960px layout. 2% of the site visitors are at 800×600 screen resolution (and yes, I know that’s not the same as browser window size). Defending the design choices already, sheesh. Still, need to go through it now and also add some more pages.

Read what I’ve been reading with Google Reader

Each month I publish a Pulse article that contains some brief commentary on a subset of articles from around the web that make it into my del.icio.us bookmarks. Today I came across a post on the Google blog pointing to a facility in Google Reader (I recently switched from Bloglines) that will allow me to publicly share what I read.

Naturally, you can subscribe to these with RSS but for ease, what follows are links to the automagically-generated web pages. Google also provide some JavaScript to publish a blogroll so if the generated HTML is clean enough I shall incorporate it into my almost-complete redesign.

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