Access U Home Knowbility training is absolute gold in accessiblity. I’ve promoted the idea of bringing Knowbility training to my fellow professionals where I live. So far my efforts to bring a traveling Knowbility show here have failed, but now there’s hope. Now Knowbility offers a two day training conference called Access U for all web professionals. It’s in Austin, Texas in May. Go. Learn. You’ll be glad you did.
Category: UsefulLinks
What you need to know about line-heights
Take a minute to read this from Eric Meyer. Eric’s Archived Thoughts: Unitless line-heights may change everything you thought you knew about line-height.
BigDaddy at Google
This Direct Mag article by Brian Quinton explains a bit about what Google is calling BigDaddy: BigDaddy Means Big Changes at Google which is yet another new Google indexing scheme to figure out. At Matt Cutts: Gadgets, Google, and SEO you will find an article called Feedback on BigDaddy data center
with lots of Q & A and information on how to give feedback on BigDaddy directly to Google.
New Rules of PR
I recently started a new blog about writing practice, First 50 Words. I struggled rather ineptly to announce it in circles that might be interested in writing practice. I’ve had almost no luck getting participation. Perhaps it’s unclear what I want readers to do. Perhaps no one is interested in tickling their creativity just a bit with the first 50 words on a random topic. Perhaps writing practice has gone out of style. For whatever reason, my PR efforts with this blog have failed so far.
I’m also midway through reading Freakonomics : A Rogue Economist Explores the Hidden Side of Everything by Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner. This book takes a radically different look at how economic forces work. Especially interesting are observations about the Internet and the
everyone’s a publisher
state of publishing today. Reading Freakonomics helps you drag your thinking out of its normal bounds in many ways and I recommend the book. The topic of incentives is key to economic behavior, according to Levitt and Dubner. I realize now that there is no incentive for anyone to contribute 50 words to my blog. Why participate? I haven’t given anyone a reason, an incentive, other than enjoying a creative jumpstart each day.
Now one of my favorite online pals who tried to help me with ideas for launching First 50 Words has provided a link to a fascinating article by David Meerman Scott, New Rules of PR. Scott’s article is long, but worth reading.
Back in the day, I was a journalism major and wrote many newspaper articles, including press releases. While those old-school rules of writing still apply, the rules for PR in the modern age have changed. Scott talks about things like using keyword rich copy, using searchable terms, including links in your article, posting your press release on your website, and other new rules.
You may already know some of this; these days it’s basic instinct to include links in your writing, for example. But it’s helpful to see it all spelled out in one place and you might learn some new techniques from it. I’m certainly going to take another look at how I publicize First 50 Words.
Good articles from Community MX
John Gallant and Holly Bergevin tell how to prepare sites for the release of IE 7 in Preparing For IE7 – Part One. If you’ve been putting off coming to grips with conditional comments, now is the time to give it your attention.
A second valuable article is Zoe Gillenwater’s Introduction to CSS Table-Related Display Values. This article is the first of two on CSS layouts that emulate the behavior of table layouts, so keep an eye peeled for the second one as well.
Both articles are free.
Intranets and where they are heading
Intranet Trends to Watch for in 2006 – Weigh In – weighin – CIO I once worked behind the scenes on a large corporate intranet and find this forecast of where intranets are heading quite interesting. Note item number 5 about Ajax and Adobe Flex.
Can you pass the quick look test?
Internet users judge Web sites in less than a blink – Yahoo! News says the latest research shows that you have about 1/20 of a second in which to convince people that your site is what they are looking for. Only a very clear message can make itself known in that length of time.