Red Cardinal » Standards http://www.redcardinal.ie Search Engine Optimisation Ireland Sun, 29 Mar 2015 16:23:50 +0000 en-US hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.9.1 Best New Indigenous website in 2007http://www.redcardinal.ie/standards/31-10-2007/golden-spider-indigenous-website/ http://www.redcardinal.ie/standards/31-10-2007/golden-spider-indigenous-website/#comments Wed, 31 Oct 2007 09:10:44 +0000 http://www.redcardinal.ie/standards/31-10-2007/golden-spider-indigenous-website/ What exactly is an indigenous website? But I could swear I've seen that site somewhere else...

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Now where have I seen that ColourGlass.ie website before…

Colour Glass Golden Spiders Indigenous Website

Oh yeah… $79 over on MonsterTemplate.com:

Template Monster Indigenous Website

Yep, pretty indigenous…

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nch.ie – National Concert Hallhttp://www.redcardinal.ie/domains/01-09-2007/nchie-not-the-national-concert-hall/ http://www.redcardinal.ie/domains/01-09-2007/nchie-not-the-national-concert-hall/#comments Sat, 01 Sep 2007 13:25:42 +0000 http://www.redcardinal.ie/standards/01-09-2007/nchie-not-the-national-concert-hall/ With a quickly expanding number of 'grey surfers' it's vital that you're site is as accessible as possible to all visitors.

Perhaps the NCH need to take some time checking the front door...

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My mother is one of the many Internet users over the age of 65. Like many older web users, until recently she had no real prior experience of using a web browser. My mother is also a classical music lover, and today she tried to look at the National Concert Hall website.

nch.ie

Surprisingly my mother knew that nch.ie was the web address of the National Concert Hall. It’s fair to assume that she discovered this offline, so the NCH has been branding the web property, and quite successfully so given my mother’s instant knowledge of their URL.

Not nch.ie

nch.ie - National Concert Hall
source: http://nch.ie

Further Irony

nch.ie - accessibility statement
source: http://www.nch.ie

Accessibilty Information:

This site has been constructed to be as accessible as possible to visitors of all abilities.

Except those who don’t realise that the www is absolutely necessary…

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Companies Registration Office (CRO.ie) Analysishttp://www.redcardinal.ie/standards/13-08-2007/cro-ie-accessibility-standards-analysis/ http://www.redcardinal.ie/standards/13-08-2007/cro-ie-accessibility-standards-analysis/#comments Mon, 13 Aug 2007 08:25:24 +0000 http://www.redcardinal.ie/standards/13-08-2007/cro-ie-accessibility-standards-analysis/ The Companies Registration Office website (CRO.ie) is a great resource for competitive business intelligence. All Irish limited companies are required to submit proper statements of account which can yield some very interesting competitive information.

I'm quite sure that a lot of money has been invested into the site over the years, and the most recent upgrade probably didn't come cheap, but why is it that public bodies are permitted to use tax payers funds without a requirement for a bare minimum of standards in the delivered outcome...

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The CRO website has always made me angry. The section of the site I use the most is the company search facility. Previously when you selected company search from the homepage you were greeted with what I can only describe as an interstitial – you had to click another link on the interstitial to get to the search facility. Let’s call a spade a spade and say that was one of the dumbest design decisions I’ve come across ever.

Michele recently posted about his woes with a new upgraded CRO.ie website. I’m happy that the search facility now is a search facility. Of course it would help me more if the page rendered correctly in Firefox, my browser of choice:

CRO Company Search Page

So let’s take a deeper look at how the new CRO.ie website stacks up in terms of the coding standards. Here’s what I checked:

Starting page: http://www.cro.ie/
Started at: 09:14:34 GMT, August 11, 2007
Time taken: 34 minutes
Validator Version: v4.2.0
Total pages checked: 344
Total links checked: 1159
Total errors found: 29843
Total warnings found: 2793

Options:

* Accessibility: A
* Spell check: GB
* Check for broken links: true
* Show warnings: true
* Identity used: Firefox 2.0 (Windows)
* Depth: 10
* Skipping path: /xmlrpc.php
* Skipping path: /feed
* DOCTYPE: Auto Detect

For anyone wondering, I use an automated java-based crawler that is far and away the best tool of it’s kind I have come across. Bad news is it’s not free. (Leave me a comment if you want more info on it.)

Here are the results:

http://www.cro.ie/
97 error(s): Parsing: 1, HTML: 58, WAI A: 12, Link Errors: 26 and 10 warning(s): HTML: 2, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 6

http://www.cro.ie/en/links.aspx

72 error(s): HTML: 42, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 16 and 8 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 5

http://www.cro.ie/ena/online-services.aspx

73 error(s): HTML: 45, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 14 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/en/online-services-company-search.aspx

72 error(s): HTML: 44, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 14 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/ena/online-services-auditor-search.aspx

70 error(s): HTML: 42, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 14 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/search/auditore.asp

340 error(s): Parsing: 3, HTML: 285, WAI A: 40, Link Errors: 12 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 3, Spell Check: 2

http://www.cro.ie/en/online-services-e-filing.aspx

Error retrieving page: http://www.cro.ie/en/online-services-e-filing.aspx : 502 Bad Gateway

http://www.cro.ie/en/post-registration.aspx

Error retrieving page: http://www.cro.ie/en/post-registration.aspx : 502 Bad Gateway

http://www.cro.ie/en/business-termination.aspx

Error retrieving page: http://www.cro.ie/en/business-termination.aspx : 502 Bad Gateway

http://www.cro.ie/en/online-services.aspx

73 error(s): HTML: 45, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 14 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/en/about-cro.aspx

80 error(s): HTML: 48, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 18 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/ena/about-cro-functions.aspx

74 error(s): HTML: 44, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 16 and 7 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 4

http://www.cro.ie/ena/about-cro-help-using-website.aspx

78 error(s): HTML: 48, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 16 and 14 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 11

http://www.cro.ie/en/quick-guides.aspx

73 error(s): HTML: 45, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 14 and 7 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 4

http://www.cro.ie/en/quick-guides.aspx?article=c982635e-0302-4739-9108-199c89404637

63 error(s): HTML: 37, WAI A: 13, Link Errors: 13 and 13 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 10

http://www.cro.ie/en/quick-guides.aspx?article=d6a7ce9c-521c-46cc-ad79-adc777f236f7

63 error(s): HTML: 37, WAI A: 13, Link Errors: 13 and 10 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 7

http://www.cro.ie/en/quick-guides.aspx?article=6f4e320b-a519-4800-a240-03b1a33a1d36

66 error(s): HTML: 40, WAI A: 13, Link Errors: 13 and 7 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 4

http://www.cro.ie/en/quick-guides.aspx?article=e06f58e4-592b-477e-82c0-b2892154b492

63 error(s): HTML: 37, WAI A: 13, Link Errors: 13 and 11 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 8

http://www.cro.ie/en/quick-guides.aspx?article=66cefd39-f235-49b6-b9c3-0fa194d53283

65 error(s): HTML: 38, WAI A: 13, Link Errors: 14 and 12 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 9

http://www.cro.ie/en/quick-guides.aspx?article=d58ec54e-42f6-4b6d-950a-c8159891a7d0

63 error(s): HTML: 37, WAI A: 13, Link Errors: 13 and 10 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 7

http://www.cro.ie/en/quick-guides.aspx?page=2

73 error(s): HTML: 45, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 14 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/en/quick-guides.aspx?page=2&article=07608afa-dcad-4c59-bb7f-5f8be3a8cb57

68 error(s): HTML: 41, WAI A: 13, Link Errors: 14 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/en/quick-guides.aspx?page=1

73 error(s): HTML: 45, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 14 and 7 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 4

http://www.cro.ie/en/quick-guides.aspx?page=1&article=d6a7ce9c-521c-46cc-ad79-adc777f236f7

63 error(s): HTML: 37, WAI A: 13, Link Errors: 13 and 10 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 7

http://www.cro.ie/en/quick-guides.aspx?page=1&article=d58ec54e-42f6-4b6d-950a-c8159891a7d0

63 error(s): HTML: 37, WAI A: 13, Link Errors: 13 and 10 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 7

http://www.cro.ie/en/quick-guides.aspx?page=1&article=66cefd39-f235-49b6-b9c3-0fa194d53283

65 error(s): HTML: 38, WAI A: 13, Link Errors: 14 and 12 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 9

http://www.cro.ie/en/quick-guides.aspx?page=1&article=c982635e-0302-4739-9108-199c89404637

63 error(s): HTML: 37, WAI A: 13, Link Errors: 13 and 13 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 10

http://www.cro.ie/en/quick-guides.aspx?page=1&article=e06f58e4-592b-477e-82c0-b2892154b492

63 error(s): HTML: 37, WAI A: 13, Link Errors: 13 and 11 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 8

http://www.cro.ie/en/quick-guides.aspx?page=1&article=6f4e320b-a519-4800-a240-03b1a33a1d36

66 error(s): HTML: 40, WAI A: 13, Link Errors: 13 and 7 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 4

http://www.cro.ie/ena/about-cro-company-search-tips.aspx

73 error(s): HTML: 43, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 16 and 7 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 4

http://www.cro.ie/ena/about-cro-account-holder.aspx

75 error(s): HTML: 45, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 16 and 7 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 4

http://www.cro.ie/en/about-cro-email-attachments.aspx

72 error(s): HTML: 42, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 16 and 9 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 6

http://www.cro.ie/ena/about-cro-company-search.aspx

88 error(s): HTML: 56, WAI A: 15, Link Errors: 17 and 8 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 5

http://www.cro.ie/en/credit-card-security.aspx

70 error(s): HTML: 42, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 14 and 8 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 5

http://www.cro.ie/ena/about-cro-email-attachments.aspx

72 error(s): HTML: 42, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 16 and 9 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 6

http://www.cro.ie/ena/about-cro-copyright.aspx

72 error(s): HTML: 42, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 16 and 7 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 4

http://www.cro.ie/en/about-cro-location.aspx

73 error(s): HTML: 42, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 17 and 12 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 9

http://www.cro.ie/en/about-cro-functions.aspx

74 error(s): HTML: 44, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 16 and 7 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 4

http://www.cro.ie/ena/about-cro-location.aspx

73 error(s): HTML: 42, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 17 and 12 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 9

http://www.cro.ie/en/about-cro-opening-hours.aspx

73 error(s): HTML: 42, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 17 and 8 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 5

http://www.cro.ie/en/about-cro-auditor-search-tips.aspx

80 error(s): HTML: 49, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 17 and 7 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 4

http://www.cro.ie/en/business-registration.aspx

76 error(s): HTML: 47, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 15 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/en/business-registration-branch.aspx

71 error(s): HTML: 42, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 15 and 8 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 5

http://www.cro.ie/en/legislation-requirements.aspx

70 error(s): HTML: 42, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 14 and 9 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 6

http://www.cro.ie/en/post-registration-branch.aspx

71 error(s): HTML: 42, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 15 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/ena/post-registration-company.aspx

71 error(s): HTML: 42, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 15 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/ena/post-registration-memo-and-arts-change.aspx

73 error(s): HTML: 44, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 15 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/en/post-registration-share-capital-change.aspx

75 error(s): HTML: 46, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 15 and 7 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 4

http://www.cro.ie/ena/post-registration-euro-and-share-capital.aspx

73 error(s): HTML: 44, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 15 and 8 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 5

http://www.cro.ie/ena/post-registration-transfer-of-shares.aspx

74 error(s): HTML: 45, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 15 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/ena/post-registration-share-capital-change.aspx

75 error(s): HTML: 46, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 15 and 7 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 4

http://www.cro.ie/ena/post-registration-register-location.aspx

71 error(s): HTML: 42, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 15 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/ena/post-registration-issue-of-prospectus.aspx

71 error(s): HTML: 42, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 15 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/ena/post-registration-type-change.aspx

75 error(s): HTML: 46, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 15 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/ena/post-registration-address-change.aspx

74 error(s): HTML: 45, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 15 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/ena/post-registration-name-change.aspx

74 error(s): HTML: 45, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 15 and 7 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 4

http://www.cro.ie/ena/post-registration-mortgages-and-charges.aspx

76 error(s): HTML: 47, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 15 and 7 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 4

http://www.cro.ie/ena/post-registration-annual-return.aspx

74 error(s): HTML: 45, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 15 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/ena/post-registration-officer-change.aspx

77 error(s): HTML: 46, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 17 and 7 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 4

http://www.cro.ie/en/b74-info.aspx

74 error(s): HTML: 46, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 14 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/search/disquale.asp

319 error(s): Parsing: 7, HTML: 262, WAI A: 36, Link Errors: 14 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 3, Spell Check: 2

http://www.cro.ie/ena/post-registration-foreign-company.aspx

71 error(s): HTML: 42, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 15 and 7 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 4

http://www.cro.ie/en/post-registration-place-of-business.aspx

71 error(s): HTML: 42, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 15 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/ena/post-registration-business-names.aspx

72 error(s): HTML: 43, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 15 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/ena/post-registration-place-of-business.aspx

71 error(s): HTML: 42, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 15 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/ena/post-registration-limited-partnership.aspx

71 error(s): HTML: 42, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 15 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/en/post-registration-mortgages-and-charges.aspx

76 error(s): HTML: 47, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 15 and 7 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 4

http://www.cro.ie/ena/post-registration-branch.aspx

71 error(s): HTML: 42, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 15 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/en/downloads-fees.aspx

78 error(s): HTML: 47, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 17 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/en/payment-methods.aspx

72 error(s): HTML: 44, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 14 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/ena/downloads-re-use-of-information.aspx

75 error(s): HTML: 45, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 16 and 7 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 4

http://www.cro.ie/template_dup_cert_details.asp

634 error(s): Parsing: 39, HTML: 484, WAI A: 66, Link Errors: 45 and 57 warning(s): WAI A: 54, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/template_dup_cert.asp?ID=16&Level1=4&Level2=3&Level3=0&Level4=0&Level5=0

743 error(s): Parsing: 39, HTML: 484, WAI A: 66, Link Errors: 154 and 57 warning(s): WAI A: 54, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/ena/downloads-bulk-data.aspx

77 error(s): HTML: 47, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 16 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/ena/downloads-minutes-of-meetings.aspx

73 error(s): HTML: 43, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 16 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/ena/downloads-crolink-2003to2005.aspx

75 error(s): HTML: 45, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 16 and 16 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 13

http://www.cro.ie/en/downloads-cro-link.aspx

79 error(s): HTML: 49, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 16 and 12 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 9

http://www.cro.ie/en/downloads-cro-accountant_forum.aspx

79 error(s): HTML: 49, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 16 and 7 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 4

http://www.cro.ie/ena/downloads-cro-accountant_forum.aspx

79 error(s): HTML: 49, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 16 and 7 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 4

http://www.cro.ie/ena/downloads-minutes-of-meetings-2005.aspx

72 error(s): HTML: 42, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 16 and 12 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 9

http://www.cro.ie/ena/downloads-cro-link.aspx

79 error(s): HTML: 49, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 16 and 12 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 9

http://www.cro.ie/ena/downloads-company.aspx

80 error(s): HTML: 49, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 17 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/en/online-services-electronic-b1.aspx

70 error(s): HTML: 42, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 14 and 9 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 6

http://www.cro.ie/ena/online-services-electronic-b1.aspx

70 error(s): HTML: 42, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 14 and 9 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 6

http://www.cro.ie/error.aspx?aspxerrorpath=/home.aspx

62 error(s): HTML: 37, WAI A: 13, Link Errors: 12 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/ena/online-services-electronic-filing-agent.aspx

73 error(s): HTML: 44, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 15 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/ena/online-services-web-forms.aspx

79 error(s): HTML: 51, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 14 and 7 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 4

http://www.cro.ie/template_dup_cert.asp?

743 error(s): Parsing: 39, HTML: 484, WAI A: 66, Link Errors: 154 and 57 warning(s): WAI A: 54, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/ena/downloads-fees.aspx

78 error(s): HTML: 47, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 17 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/ena/downloads-legislation.aspx

74 error(s): HTML: 44, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 16 and 8 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 5

http://www.cro.ie/en/downloads-legislation-company.aspx

83 error(s): HTML: 53, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 16 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/en/downloads-legislation-limited-partnership.aspx

80 error(s): HTML: 50, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 16 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/ena/downloads-legislation-limited-partnership.aspx

80 error(s): HTML: 50, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 16 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/en/downloads-legislation-business-name.aspx

78 error(s): HTML: 48, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 16 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/ena/downloads-legislation-company.aspx

83 error(s): HTML: 53, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 16 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/ena/downloads-legislation-business-name.aspx

78 error(s): HTML: 48, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 16 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/ena/downloads-business-name.aspx

80 error(s): HTML: 49, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 17 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/ena/downloads-limited-partnerships.aspx

73 error(s): HTML: 43, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 16 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/ena/downloads-publications.aspx

79 error(s): HTML: 49, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 16 and 8 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 5

http://www.cro.ie/ena/downloads-newsletter.aspx

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66 error(s): HTML: 38, WAI A: 13, Link Errors: 15 and 7 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 4

http://www.cro.ie/en/newsletter-2006.aspx?article=a86cca61-a66e-461c-a4bd-7901503e7304

66 error(s): HTML: 38, WAI A: 13, Link Errors: 15 and 7 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 4

http://www.cro.ie/en/newsletter-2006.aspx?article=afb758cf-427e-4ef2-a38a-01f2d057c446

67 error(s): HTML: 38, WAI A: 13, Link Errors: 16 and 9 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 6

http://www.cro.ie/en/newsletter-2006.aspx?article=ded3af45-586c-40bf-b290-06a7271e90ba

66 error(s): HTML: 38, WAI A: 13, Link Errors: 15 and 8 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 5

http://www.cro.ie/en/newsletter-2006.aspx?article=15a18d51-9eaf-4448-8b60-70aa147dff35

66 error(s): HTML: 38, WAI A: 13, Link Errors: 15 and 7 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 4

http://www.cro.ie/en/newsletter-2006.aspx?article=be584c98-f7e4-41f0-a87e-882da2881a47

66 error(s): HTML: 38, WAI A: 13, Link Errors: 15 and 8 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 5

http://www.cro.ie/en/downloads-press-desk.aspx

75 error(s): HTML: 45, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 16 and 7 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 4

http://www.cro.ie/ena/whats-new-2004.aspx

84 error(s): HTML: 50, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 20 and 19 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 16

http://www.cro.ie/en/online-services-duplicate-certificate.aspx

74 error(s): HTML: 46, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 14 and 7 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 4

http://www.cro.ie/en/downloads-business-name.aspx

80 error(s): HTML: 49, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 17 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/en/downloads-company.aspx

80 error(s): HTML: 49, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 17 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/en/online-services-auditor-search.aspx

70 error(s): HTML: 42, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 14 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/en/opening-deposit-account.aspx

70 error(s): HTML: 42, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 14 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/en/contact-us.aspx

72 error(s): HTML: 42, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 16 and 9 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 6

http://www.cro.ie/ena/online-services-late-penalty-calculator.aspx

70 error(s): HTML: 42, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 14 and 6 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 3

http://www.cro.ie/en/downloads-forms.aspx

96 error(s): HTML: 50, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 32 and 11 warning(s): HTML: 1, WAI A: 2, Spell Check: 8

http://www.cro.ie/en/advanced-search.aspx

102 error(s): HTML: 74, WAI A: 14, Link Errors: 14 and 9 warning(s): Parsing: 1, HTML: 1, WAI A: 3, Spell Check: 4

And some explanation of the errors:
‘HTML’ refers to the markup errors.
‘WAI A’ errors refer to non-compliance with WCAG WAI A accessibility criteria.
‘Link Errors’ errors refer to broken, timed out or forbidden links (the tool hits the target server, so I wouldn’t draw too many conclusions from this reading).

and the warnings:
‘HTML’ warnings refer to non-serious issues, in the case of most of the pages validated an issue with the DOC-TYPE (missing attribute).
‘WAI A’ warnings refer to non-crucial accessibility warnings (e.g. using <script> without a corresponding <noscript>).
‘Spell Check’ warmings refer to possible spellings mistakes using a UK English dictionary. In some cases these may be FPs, in others (e.g. ‘Filiing’) not so.

I’m sure their site is far bigger than the number of pages crawled – the crawl was selective.

That might make for some interesting reading for the powers that be over at the CRO?

Have thoughts on this post? Head over and leave a comment on the blog: Companies Registration Office (CRO.ie) Analysis

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When Your SEO Provider Promotes Cloakinghttp://www.redcardinal.ie/search-engine-optimisation/20-03-2007/cloaking-search-engines/ http://www.redcardinal.ie/search-engine-optimisation/20-03-2007/cloaking-search-engines/#comments Tue, 20 Mar 2007 11:10:19 +0000 http://www.redcardinal.ie/search-engine-optimisation/20-03-2007/cloaking-search-engines/ "Cloaking outsmarts the search engines to increase your listings, and increase your web site traffic by a hit generating tool."

This is going to be controversial.

Have thoughts on this post? Head over and leave a comment on the blog: When Your SEO Provider Promotes Cloaking

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I’m fascinated by referrer logs. The logs can be very entertaining, and it’s amazing to see some of the search terms people find you for. Apparently I rank number #1 for ‘seo related sites‘ (from my location anyhow):

seo related site - Google search results

You might well be asking yourself what is the Red Cardinal crackpot on about now? Well, this is another one of those ‘one thing leads to another‘ posts.

My Site Clinic Rant

Last week I blogged my views on the forthcoming Search Marketing World expo. In particular I felt that disclosure around the site clinic sponsorship was very weak. Some people agreed, some people didn’t see the problem.

Back to the ‘seo related sites’ SERP

The Google screen capture above shows many of the usual agencies promoting their SEO services via Adwords. The Ring John ad above the organic listings took my notice. In particular I was interested in the guarantee:

Ring John PPC ad

They have a good landing page – everything is there to help you take that next step. I don’t need the services they offer, but I did take a little look around their site. I clicked on ‘Knowledge’ in the main navigation. I was a bit surprised at the second article under ‘Google Expert Knowledgebase’ -> ‘Search Engine Optimisation‘:

RingJohn - use_cloaking_software_to_optimise_your_website.html

Quoting the article from that page (which is actually titled “Use Cloaking Software to Optimise your Website”):

Being listed on top in the search engine results is practically the priority of online marketing. In order to attain this primary objective, several techniques and ways have been explored and experimented with. Some techniques are successful but some are not. In fact, the impact of each technique varies relatively to different web marketers.

Spidering may be very efficient to some but not to all.

If your problem is how to maintain traffic in your web site, worry no more because a search engine cloaker is around. Cloaking outsmarts the search engines to increase your listings, and increase your web site traffic by a hit generating tool. How is this possible? Simple. The cloaker automatically generates thousands of pages just for the spiders. These are built from keyword list you manage through a web console.

While search engines take their listing through sending automated spiders to go to each site, follow respective links, and do the indexing of keywords, the cloaker, once installed in your server, optimises your site by simply updating itself to ensure that you are all the time is with the best solution to outscore search engine. It does not use spam indexing techniques like ALT tags, hiding keywords, and others. It will just build keyword-rich pages that will definitely top in the search listing. In other words, a cloaker beats the traditional search engine spider.

Cloaking software is commonly used in commercial areas of highly competitive fields such as travel, softwar,e, and real estate. Although it underwent some controversies in the process, cloaking proved to be very effective as used by many web sites ranging in size from small companies to many big time enterprises. There was a time when Google did not agree completely to the idea of cloaking thinking that it is not always a good thing, did not recommend it to people because they believe most people use it in an abusive manner yet realised and understand that there are a large number of companies, many of them their advertisers, that use the technology and it is not causing any harm in many cases. As long as cloaking is use responsibly for the benefit of the web users, then there is never a problem in its employment.

Let me just note that Google has never endorsed the use of cloaking in the sense mentioned above. While there are situations when cloaking can be justified (e.g. conditional redirects), the above mentioned techniques do not fit those situations in any way, shape or form.

Google’s Guidelines

Let’s see what Google states about cloaking:

From Google Webmaster Help:

Things to Avoid

Don’t fill your page with lists of keywords, attempt to “cloak” pages, or put up “crawler only” pages. If your site contains pages, links, or text that you don’t intend visitors to see, Google considers those links and pages deceptive and may ignore your site.

And from the Official Webmaster Guidelines:

Quality guidelines – basic principles

  • Make pages for users, not for search engines. Don’t deceive your users or present different content to search engines than you display to users, which is commonly referred to as “cloaking.”
  • Avoid tricks intended to improve search engine rankings. A good rule of thumb is whether you’d feel comfortable explaining what you’ve done to a website that competes with you. Another useful test is to ask, “Does this help my users? Would I do this if search engines didn’t exist?”

And from the same page:

Quality guidelines – specific guidelines

  • Avoid hidden text or hidden links.
  • Don’t employ cloaking or sneaky redirects.
  • Don’t send automated queries to Google.
  • Don’t load pages with irrelevant words.
  • Don’t create multiple pages, subdomains, or domains with substantially duplicate content.
  • Don’t create pages that install viruses, trojans, or other badware.
  • Avoid “doorway” pages created just for search engines, or other “cookie cutter” approaches such as affiliate programs with little or no original content.
  • If your site participates in an affiliate program, make sure that your site adds value. Provide unique and relevant content that gives users a reason to visit your site first.

Checking further:

Why does Google remove sites from the Google index?
Google may temporarily or permanently remove sites from its index and search results if it believes it is obligated to do so by law, if the sites do not meet Google’s quality guidelines, or for other reasons, such as if the sites detract from users’ ability to locate relevant information. We cannot comment on the individual reasons a page may be removed. However, certain actions such as cloaking, writing text in such a way that it can be seen by search engines but not by users, or setting up pages/links with the sole purpose of fooling search engines may result in removal from our index. Please read our Webmaster Guidelines for more information.

[Emphasis added.]

So what’s the point?

I know that it is very bad form to dish a competitor. I also know that this isn’t going to make me any friends, and will more likely than not reflect badly on my own reputation.

But this isn’t about dishing competitors. This is about disclosure. I’ll let readers put two and two together.

Have thoughts on this post? Head over and leave a comment on the blog: When Your SEO Provider Promotes Cloaking

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$65m, And Some Of The Worst Use Of Javascript Everhttp://www.redcardinal.ie/javascript/27-02-2007/myhome2let-ie-javascript-links/ http://www.redcardinal.ie/javascript/27-02-2007/myhome2let-ie-javascript-links/#comments Tue, 27 Feb 2007 09:18:27 +0000 http://www.redcardinal.ie/webdev/27-02-2007/myhome2let-ie-javascript-links/ Use Javascsript well and you get some of the best web-based applications like Gmail and Google Reader.

Use Javascript where you should really be using plain HTML? Well here's a nice $65m example that teaches a good lesson.

Have thoughts on this post? Head over and leave a comment on the blog: $65m, And Some Of The Worst Use Of Javascript Ever

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Javascript is one of my favourite web technologies. When I stop to think how the Internet would be without Javascript I can’t help but think how much less productive and enjoyable my days would be.

Take for instance all the great apps Google makes freely available. Gmail would still work, but the crippled Javascript-free version doesn’t cut it for me. And then there’s Reader, another of my most used apps. It doesn’t degrade quite so gracefully. Actually, like Calendar, it doesn’t degrade at all.

Complicated web apps can be forgiven for not degrading in the absence of Javascript. By their nature they rely on JS to handle heavy lifting functions. For more elementary functions graceful degradation can enable similar functionality. Personally I favour scripting to the DOM after the web page loads and replacing HTML functionality with a Javascript alternative that adds behaviour to the page. That way your site remains functional without Javascript.

But what happens when you use Javascript when you really shouldn’t?

The $65m Javascript Links

Back in 2006 one of Ireland’s largest Internet acquisitions saw Ireland.com, the web property of The Irish Times newspaper, purchase MyHome.ie for a reported $65m. I covered the story here. MyHome.ie is (apparently) an extremely profitable property (real-estate) website.

But apparently MyHome.ie has a smaller sister, a little known site called MyHome2Let.ie. And perhaps little known for good reason. Here’s a shot of their site:

MyHome2Let.ie Homepage

Looks innocuous enough. But the kicker is in how the primary navigation is coded:

<td id="mainmenu_td_t0" class="mainmenu mainmenu_t_on" valign="middle" align="center" onclick="window.open('http://www.myhome2let.ie/','_self');" onmouseout="mainmenu_Roll(0);" onmouseover="mainmenu_Roll(0);">HOME</td>
<td width="1" rowspan="2">
</td>
<td id="mainmenu_td_t1" class="mainmenu mainmenu_t_on" valign="middle" align="center" onclick="window.open('http://www.myhome2let.ie/search/', '_self');" onmouseout="mainmenu_Roll(1);" onmouseover="mainmenu_Roll(1);">SEARCH</td>
<td width="1" rowspan="2">
</td>
<td id="mainmenu_td_t2" class="mainmenu mainmenu_t" valign="middle" align="center" onclick="window.open('http://www.myhome2let.ie/advertise/', '_self');" onmouseout="mainmenu_Roll(2);" onmouseover="mainmenu_Roll(2);">ADVERTISE</td>
<td width="1" rowspan="2">
</td>
<td id="mainmenu_td_t3" class="mainmenu mainmenu_t" valign="middle" align="center" onclick="window.open('http://www.myhome2let.ie/services/', '_self');" onmouseout="mainmenu_Roll(3);" onmouseover="mainmenu_Roll(3);">USEFUL SERVICES</td>
<td width="1" rowspan="2">
</td>
<td id="mainmenu_td_t4" class="mainmenu mainmenu_t" valign="middle" align="center" onclick="window.open('http://www.myhome2let.ie/info/', '_self');" onmouseout="mainmenu_Roll(4);" onmouseover="mainmenu_Roll(4);">INFO & ADVICE</td>

In case your wondering what all that code does, well it does what should have been accomplished in about 10% of that mark-up. It instructs the browser, in the most convoluted way possible, how to handle the primary navigation links that you can see in the image.

But worse still, those links, the primary site navigation links, are implemented in Javascript. Turn off JS and the site no longer works. You simply can’t navigate the site.

And the real cherry on this particular pie is that search engines have never been good at handling Javascript very well. Do you think that any of the pages linked to via the Javascript code are cached by Google? I’ll let my silence answer that question.

The Motto of this Story

Javascript is a great language. Used well the potential of the web expands massively. But make sure you use HTML where it was designed to be used, and Javascript only when you need to do some heavy lifting that HTML can’t handle.

Have thoughts on this post? Head over and leave a comment on the blog: $65m, And Some Of The Worst Use Of Javascript Ever

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Apple iPhone the Tipping-Point for Mobile Internet?http://www.redcardinal.ie/marketing/10-01-2007/apple-iphone-mobile-internet/ http://www.redcardinal.ie/marketing/10-01-2007/apple-iphone-mobile-internet/#comments Wed, 10 Jan 2007 10:57:14 +0000 http://www.redcardinal.ie/marketing/10-01-2007/apple-iphone-mobile-internet/ Here comes the iPhone. It looks great, Apple are fated for their customer-centric products, and the feature set may revolutionise how we interact with our phones.

But could the iPhone herald the genesis of the Mobile Internet we are waiting to get?

Have thoughts on this post? Head over and leave a comment on the blog: Apple iPhone the Tipping-Point for Mobile Internet?

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Rightyo, ever man and his dog is reporting the much rumoured Apple iPhone.

Judging by the photos Apple will release an ultra sleek device (no surprise). And of course, Apple are renowned for nailing fantastic technology interfaces. Keeping it simple with absolutely functional interfaces is the cornerstone of Apples design.

But could this herald the long-postponed ‘Mobile Internet Era’?

Read/Write Web is talking up the UI, which, without a stylus, should be interesting. (When I heard about pinching gestures I thought about this great video of a multi-touch interface.)

The out-of-the-box partnership with both Google and Yahoo! shows a quite serious posture to target the Internet user – the free push-email from Yahoo! must be of concern to Blackberry? And the iPhone will also include some pretty comprehensive connectivity options to keep you on-line.

But it’s Apple’s ability to take a product and push it into the mainstream, both physically and mentally, that offers the greatest chance that the iPhone will be the tipping-point for mobile Internet. If Apple manages to achieve the same success for the iPhone as the iPod I think Mobile Internet will finally become a mainstream reality. (Notice the slide on Read/Write showing 10m units and 1% market share in 2008. Bear in mind iPod has 80%+ share…)

When mobile devices become the prevalent access points for the Internet (there’s a lot more mobile phones than computers) we are going to have a sea-change in search (hello localisation), and websites will need to get clever about publishing content for mobile (hi xHTML, device-optimised content).

Now, I just wonder how Irish businesses/websites will be positioned for the Mobile Internet?

Not unrelated, but if you want to eliminate you mobile roaming charges try Roam4Free, an international sim that lets you roam for free.

Have thoughts on this post? Head over and leave a comment on the blog: Apple iPhone the Tipping-Point for Mobile Internet?

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Really Simple Guide to RSShttp://www.redcardinal.ie/blogs/15-12-2006/really-simple-guide-to-rss/ http://www.redcardinal.ie/blogs/15-12-2006/really-simple-guide-to-rss/#comments Fri, 15 Dec 2006 08:36:01 +0000 http://www.redcardinal.ie/search-engine-optimisation/15-12-2006/really-simple-guide-to-rss/ As the title suggests, this is A Really Simple Guide to RSS.

Have thoughts on this post? Head over and leave a comment on the blog: Really Simple Guide to RSS

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After Missing Sinn Fein’s RSS feed for my eGovernment Study I thought it might be a good idea to take a look at RSS – what it is and how to use it.

What is RSS?

Really Simple Syndication is a format for publishing web pages and other content.

In essence RSS is very similar to the content you would find on any website, with a few differences. RSS does not include any styling information that would give the ‘page’ a custom design or layout. If you can imagine reading this page without the header up top, the sidebar on the right or anything else that is superfluous to the viewing this story.

An RSS ‘feed’ can also contain more than one ‘page’ in a single file. That’s the real beauty of RSS – you can look at many stories or pages from a website without leaving the RSS ‘page’ or feed.

But perhaps the biggest difference between RSS and a regular web page is the ability to aggregate or combine multiple RSS ‘feeds’ (published RSS files are often referred to as a ‘feeds’) in your ‘reader’. A ‘reader’ is a program used to read and display the ‘feeds’ or RSS pages. Here’s what mine looks like:

Really Simple Guide to RSS - Google Reader

I read the feeds from over 100 websites just about most days. Now if I was to visit all those sites it might take me 3 or 4 hours, but my reader shows me the feeds fom all those sites on one page. I can view the website name, the title and a snippet of each item. When I click on a story title I can read the content of that ‘page’:

Google Reader open story

Using my reader to aggregate thee feeds I can keep track of many, many blogs and websites.

RSS Readers

I use Google Reader. It’s free and rather than sit on my computer it sits on the Internet so I can access my feeds from any computer with Internet access.

The main web browsers and email clients now incorporate RSS features also. Firefox, Internet Explorer, Safari and Opera allow you to track and read feeds right in your browser.

So how can you tell if a site publishes a feed?

When you visit a website you might see the following icon appear in your address bar:

RSS auto discovery through META

That icon has been adopted by all the major browsers for the purpose of depicting RSS feeds. It is available for download at Feed Icons. Older feed icons might look like this:

RSS icon XML icon Feed icon

You can see that orange is the predominant colour used to depict RSS.

Making your feed icon appear in the address bar

Since most of the major browsers now support RSS it is a good idea to notify the browser that you have a feed so that the RSS icon appears in the address bar. To make your feed visible to agents you should include something similar to the following META in the head section of your page:

<link rel="alternate" type="application/rss+xml" title="RSS 2.0" href="http://www.site.tld/path/to/rss2.0/feed/" />
<link rel="alternate" type="text/xml" title="RSS .92" href="http://www.site.tld/path/to/rss0.92/feed/" />
<link rel="alternate" type="application/atom+xml" title="Atom 0.3" href="http://www.site.tld/path/to/atom0.3/feed/" />

This auto discovery technique is also used by most readers and blog aggregators so it is a good idea to include it.

RSS features and uses

RSS can be used for many purposes. E-commerce stores can publish their products via RSS. Employment sites often offer customised search feeds so users can keep tabs on particular job-type vacancies. Many large sites offer multiple feeds so you can track only the information of interest to you.

Search engines and RSS

Search engines love RSS. They just devour feeds because they are very machine readable. Feeds also contain something search engines love: TEXT. And lots of it.

Very often my feed will rank well for specific search phrases and my site might have 2 or 3 pages ranking on the first SERP (Search Engine Result Page) – the post, my homepage and my feed . When multiple results from my site appear on a results page the probability of receiving a referral increase dramatically.

So does RSS matter?

RSS is here. It has not reached the tipping-point just yet, but the integration of RSS into the major browsers during 2006 means that RSS should become more and more mainstream over time.

And just as I finish this what appears in my reader?

the latest research done by Japan.Internet.com and goo Research shows that RSS’s bringing more accesses to the sites.

Q1: Do you visit more sites due to RSS feeds?
- More, 34.6%
- Hasn’t changed, 59.5%
- Less, 5.8%

Q2: Do you visit sites you read on RSS feeds?
- Always, 23.5%
- Sometimes, 58.1%

From Multilingual-Search.

Perfect :mrgreen:

Have thoughts on this post? Head over and leave a comment on the blog: Really Simple Guide to RSS

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eGovernment Accessibility Analysishttp://www.redcardinal.ie/browsers/10-12-2006/irish-egovernment-accessibility-analysis/ http://www.redcardinal.ie/browsers/10-12-2006/irish-egovernment-accessibility-analysis/#comments Sun, 10 Dec 2006 20:44:15 +0000 http://www.redcardinal.ie/webdev/10-12-2006/irish-egovernment-accessibility-analysis/ A study into the Accessibility of major Government, Public and Political websites.

The full study is available for download from within this post.

Have thoughts on this post? Head over and leave a comment on the blog: eGovernment Accessibility Analysis

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  • Summary
  • Download Report (.pdf)
  • Introduction
  • eGovernment
  • National Disability Authority
  • Accessibility
  • New Internet Technologies
  • Detailed Results
  • Is the eGovernment interface accessible?
  • Is it all Bad News?
  • Lynx Browser Results
  • Notes
  • Errors, Ommissions & Corrections
  • Summary

    The websites of a number of Government Departments, Agencies and Political Parties were tested for accessibility and coding standards. The sites were also checked for contemporary web technologies such as RSS.

    Results Overview:

    Government Department websites tested: 16
    Valid CSS, (X)HTML & passing WCAG 1.0 Level A: 4 (25%)
    Sites passing WCAG 1.0 Level A: 12 (75%)
    Sites utilising RSS: 4 (25%)

    Other Public websites tested: 18
    Valid CSS, (X)HTML and passing WCAG 1.0 Level A: 0 (0%)
    Sites passing WCAG 1.0 Level A: 12 (67%)
    Sites utilising RSS: 2 (11%)

    Political Party websites tested: 7
    Valid CSS, (X)HTML and passing WCAG 1.0 Level A: 0 (0%)
    Sites passing WCAG 1.0 Level A: 3 (43%)
    Sites utilising RSS: 3 (43%)

    Introduction

    There is one entity that impacts daily on each of our lives. That entity is the Government.

    The Irish government is the body tasked with the administration of the land of Ireland. As such the government is responsible for making the law, enforcing the law, and maintaining the welfare of the citizens. It is no surprise that the interface of citizen and government is one of the most important elements of any political system.

    Technology is the new interface

    The first Information Society Action Plan was published in January 1999 and in November 2001 Ireland had become the top performer in an EU benchmarking report on public service on-line delivery.

    In March 2002 the Irish Government published “New Connections – A strategy to realise the potential of the Information Society”. The document set forth an action plan identifying key infrastructures that required development, one of which was eGovernment.

    eGovernment

    eGovernment refers to the use of information and communication technology (ICT) as an interface between the citizens and government of a nation. Most often the term refers to the use of the Internet as a communication platform to allow the exchange of information and the execution of processes that had previously been undertaken via direct human interaction.

    Introduction of eGovernment is an EU-level policy, and part of a broader EU strategy to make Europe the most dynamic and efficient economic block in the world. ICT is seen as the key facilitator of this strategy:

    The successes and potential of eGovernment are already clearly visible with several EU countries ranking amongst the world leaders. Electronic invoicing in Denmark saves taxpayers €150 million and businesses €50 million a year. If introduced all over the EU, annual savings could add up to over €50 billion. Disabled people in Belgium can now obtain benefits over the Internet in seconds, whereas previously this took 3 or 4 weeks. Such time savings and convenience can become widespread and benefit all citizens in Europe in many public services. (Source: COM(2006) 173 final)

    ICT is also seen as an enabler and facilitator of inclusive strategies as set out by the EU.

    The 2002 document makes a number of references to the availability and accessibility of government websites:

    • 3.2.1 Website standards – Guidelines and standards for all public sector websites were produced in November 1999, building on best practice in relation to design, search facilities and accessibility guidelines.
    • 7.2.7 Accessibility – Under the eEurope Action Plan, all public sector websites are required to be WAI18 (level 2) compliant by end-2001.

    National Disability Authority

    The National Disability Authority is a statutory agency tasked with policy development, research and advice on standards designed to safeguard the rights of people with disabilities.

    Is the eGovernment interface accessible?

    The purpose of the study is to measure the accessibility of the primary government agency websites. The websites of the main political parties were also tested as those organisations are inherently connected to the administration of a democracy through their stated goals and policies.

    The following tests were conducted to ascertain a measure of web standards and accessibility:

    1. W3C CSS validation service (here);
    2. Visual inspection for W3C badges;
    3. W3C Markup Validation Service v0.7.3 (here);
    4. HiSoftware Cynthia Says Section 508 Validation service (here);
    5. HiSoftware Cynthia Says WCAG 1.0 Priority 1 Validation service (here);
    6. HiSoftware Cynthia Says WCAG 1.0 Priorities 1&2 Validation service (here);
    7. HiSoftware Cynthia Says WCAG 1.0 Priorities 1&2&3 Validation service (here);
    8. Total Validator Professional desktop HTML & Accessibility validation tool (available here);
    9. WAVE WCAG 1.0 and Section 508 visual site overlay tool (here);
    10. Usability analysis of page in text browser (Lynx);
    11. Manual inspection of the mark-up to identify ‘cut-and-paste’ coding;
    12. Visual inspection for RSS feed, search for auto-discovery of RSS feed (Firefox);
    13. Visual inspection for blog;
    14. Visual inspection for real-time chat function.

    In this study the 3 automated accessibility validators were used and in some case supplemented by manual evaluation in the Lynx text browser. Tests were limited to the homepage of each site (in some cases an inner page was tested – e.g. where splash pages were used and the home page was therefore an inner page). All tests were conducted during the period 20-31 November 2006.

    While these tests cannot be guaranteed to properly ascertain the accessibility of any webpage, they do serve to highlight a number of flaws that would ordinarily render a page inaccessible via screen-reading technology.

    Why search for RSS, blogs, real-time chat?

    The Internet is evolving. Buzzwords such as web2.0 are common place. In my view what we are seeing is not a change but a natural progression. Today’s Internet is about interaction, multiple-way dialogue, and innovative communication channels.

    This study therefore includes tests for interactive techniques and alternative distribution channels.

    RSS

    Homepages were checked for RSS (Really Simple Syndication) feeds. RSS is fast becoming the de-facto transport for on-line information syndication (note the recent integration of RSS into the latest browsers from both Microsoft and Mozilla). In cases where a feed was not apparent on a homepage the Press section (or similar) was also checked.

    It would seem both appropriate and desirable that any entity which relies on news agencies to broadcast their message would utilise RSS.

    Blogs

    While not appropriate for every context, blogs have been found to add transparency and openness within a political setting. Blogs also allow for meaningful dialogue between writer and audience.

    Real-Time Chat

    Used by the software industry for many years, real-time chat facilities allow Internet users to ‘chat’ with a support agent through a real-time messaging system.

    Detailed Results

    eGovernment Accessibility Study
    [NOTE: Please click on the above image for a larger resolution and an alternative accessible version.]

    Is the eGovernment interface accessible?

    The study tested a total of 41 websites: 27 sites passed the automated WCAG 1.0 Priority 1 (A) validation tests.

    Of the Government Department websites tested 12 from a total of 16 were compliant with WCAG 1.0 Priority 1 (A).

    The lack of RSS feeds on 12 department websites was a particularly odd result given the relationship of Government with the public and press, and the Government’s need to shape public perception through the news channels.

    The websites of the main political parties were found to be lacking in terms of contemporary Internet technologies: Only 3 of the 7 party websites included an RSS feed and none offered multiple feeds targeting different content and audiences.

    4 of the 7 party websites tested failed WCAG 1.0 Priority 1 (A), and none validated for valid CSS/HTML coding standards.

    Is it all Bad News?

    A positive feature of this survey was the number of Government websites that aspired for a higher standard of validation than the basic WAI WCAG 1.0 Priority 1 (A).

    At least 4 sites displayed WCAG Priority 2 (AA) badges on their homepages. Unfortunately only 1 actually attained that level of Accessibility.

    At least 2 sites displayed or made claim to WCAG Priority 3 (AAA) Accessibility, the highest level of accessibility, however none did validate to this standard.

    Some websites tested stated a clear aspiration to achieve high accessibility and informed visitors of the ongoing effort toward attaining that goal.

    Validation is a binary test – a site either validates or it does not. In some cases failure can be remedied with minimal effort, while in others achieving compliance with both WAI WCAG 1.0 and W3C coding standards will require a substantial undertaking.

    Creating a website that complies with WCAG is perhaps the easier phase of providing an accessible website. Maintaining WCAG compliance is by far the most difficult area of website accessibility, even more so given the dynamic nature of many of the sites tested.

    Web standards, such as those developed by W3C and WAI, are the foundation of the ‘Inclusive Web’. Websites which comply with these standards will ensure that the broadest spectrum of visitors can access their information and benefit from the full potential the Internet has to offer.

    Lynx Browser Results

    In cases where accessibility anomalies were flagged by automated evaluation tools the site in question was manually evaluated in the Lynx text-browser.

    The search facility on a number of Government sites was found to cause practical accessibility issues:

    1. Department of the Taoiseach:

    Department of the Taoiseach homepage view in Lynx browser.

    Here is the mark-up for the search feature:

    <form id="basicSearch" action="search.asp" method="get">
    <div class="searchTop"><label for="searchWord" accesskey="4" /></div>
    <div class="searchMiddle"><input class="searchFormInput" type="text" name="searchWord" id="searchWord" size="16" value="Enter keyword" /></div>
    <div class="searchBottom"><input type="image" value="submit" name="search_go" id="search_go" src="/images/search/button_search.gif" alt="Search" /></div>
    </form>

    This is Andy Harold’s opinion on the above code:

    This is an attempt to resolve the need to have a label tag and to put some default text in the text field. But appears to be done purely to satisfy accessibility checkers than real life requirements, and may even upset some screen readers. I’d say this is poor practice. The label should have some text within it and there shouldn’t be a ‘value’ attribute in the text field.

    Putting default text in comes from 10.4 (Priority 3): Until user agents handle empty controls correctly, include default, place-holding characters in edit boxes and text areas. But this became outdated almost as soon as it was written, because all the user agents used by people with sight difficulties can handle empty controls. So the use of label tags meets all needs.

    2. National Disability Authority

    The mark-up powering the search facility:

    <label for="query" accesskey="4">
    <input name="q" id="query" title="Enter keywords to search for" value="" size="30" type="text">
    <input title="Submit your search and view results" value="Search" type="submit">
    </label>

    Andy Harold’s opinion:

    Enclosing input’s within a label is allowed by the standards so that you don’t have to supply a ‘for’ attribute as it the label implicitly refers to the enclosed input. Having the two inputs enclosed by the label, as in your example, makes this confusing. The fact that there is no text in the label tag makes this more confusing still. So although technically you can do this – ie passes automatic validation tests – it’s not the correct use of the label element and so wouldn’t be what a user agent (eg a screen reader) would be expecting and so may cause it problems. So, on that basis I wouldn’t pass it as P3 simply because it makes little sense.

    Remember that the standards can’t cover every situation and so are purely there to guide you into making good decisions. In this case you could put some text in the label (and take the input elements out of it) if you really want it to be passed as P3. But if this makes the search facility too visually unappealing, just drop the label altogether. This may not make it technically ‘P3′ but more importantly it will still be accessible because of the title attribute, so it shouldn’t matter.

    3. Pobail

    Here is the Lynx view of the English version Pobail homepage:

    Pobail English homepage view in Lynx browser.

    And here is the underlying mark-up:

    <label for="search">
    <input type="text" name="qt" id="search" value="" maxlength="1991" />
    </label>
    <input type="submit" value="Go" class="submit" />

    While the search element may pass automated validators, the form itself has little value to users of screen reading technologies. The ‘Advanced search options’ link is in another div.

    [NOTE: Andy Harold is the developer of Total Validator. The tool is available as either a free Firefox plug-in or a professional desktop application.]

    Study Notes:

    1. Strange use of JavaScript that depreciates in Lynx but prohibits access to links in non-JavaScript enabled browsers.
    2. The Department of Arts, Sport and Tourism displayed a WCAG 1.0 AA Badge.
    3. The Department of Arts, Sport and Tourism did not validate WCAG 1.0 AA
    4. RSS feed not included in META section and was not auto-discovered by browser. Auto-discovery allows browsers to display and bookmark RSS feeds.
    5. The Department of Enterprise, Trade and Employment displayed a WCAG 1.0 AA Badge and passed that standard.
    6. RSS feed found on inner page with no META auto-detection.
    7. Address in footer is an image – ALT=”Department Address”. This is a particularly poor implementation as the address can neither be read by screen-reading technologies or copy-pasted form the browser.
    8. www.pobail.ie uses a splash homepage. Inner English language homepage tested.
    9. Empty LABEL (no text node) in page’s search form.
    10. Empty LABEL (no text node) in page’s search form.
    11. BASIS carried a WCAG 1.0 AA Badge and failed that standard.
    12. Framed site – each frameset was validated individually.
    13. WAVE cannot validate framed sites.
    14. In-line style attributes – no CSS file to validate.
    15. http://www.cso.ie/accessibility/accessibility.htm claims site is WCAG1.0 AAA compliant with timestamp. That page, which is unlikely to have been updated, failed AAA validation.
    16. RSS feed found on inner page with no META auto-detection.
    17. RSS via auto-discovery, but no mention on page.
    18. RSS feed found on inner page with no META detection.
    19. FAS Ireland carried a WCAG 1.0 AAA Badge but failed AAA validation.
    20. FAS Ireland homepage contained 6 errors when tested for WCAG 1.0 AAA.
    21. www.examinations.ie carried a WCAG 1.0 AA Badge.
    22. www.examinations.ie contained 30 errors when tested for WCAG 1.0 AA.
    23. In-line style attributes, framed site.
    24. No publicly published link was found.
    25. Resolved to the website of Clare County Development Board.
    26. www.libraries.ie uses JavaScript links to popup new pages – blocked in FF and IE7. The site was virtually unusable.
    27. Server not found error.
    28. Website did not respond for http://nda.ie – this could cause problems for many visitors. WAVE validator was served the login page so WAVE analysis could not be performed. There were also some issues with the search form which are discussed toward the end of this document.

    Page URLs

    Government Departments
    Foreign Affairs, Dept. of
    Agriculture and Food, Dept. of
    Arts, Sport and Tourism, Dept. of
    Communications, Marine and Natural Resources, Dept. of
    Health and Children, Dept. of
    Education and Science, Dept. of
    Enterprise, Trade and Employment, Dept. of
    Environment, Heritage and Local Government, Dept. of
    Finance, Dept. of
    Defence, Dept. of
    Justice, Equality and Law Reform, Dept. of
    Community, Rural and Gaeltacht Affairs, Dept. of
    Community, Rural and Gaeltacht Affairs, Dept. of
    Taoiseach, Dept. of the
    Transport, Dept. of
    Social and Family Affairs, Dept. of

    Government Informational Portals
    Business Access to State Information and Services
    Public Service Information for Ireland

    Other Government Websites
    Office of the Revenue Commissioner
    Official website of the President of Ireland
    The Courts Service of Ireland
    The Office of Public Works
    Central Statistics Office

    Political Party Websites
    Fianna Fail
    Fianna Geil
    The Labour Party
    The Green Party
    Progressive Democrats
    Socialist and Workers Part
    Sinn Fein

    Websites Highlighted in Society Action Plan
    Revenue Online Service (ROS)
    FÁS e-recruitment
    Land Registry
    Examination results
    CAO (Central Applications Office)
    Driving tests
    Government Contracts
    Public Service Recruitment
    National Sheep Identification System (NSIS)
    eForms
    Welfare.ie
    Libraries
    Infrastructure.ie
    Farmer IT Training

    National Disability Authority

    Errors, Ommissions & Corrections:

    1. 11-December-2006 12.01PM Since publishing the report it has been brought to my attention that the Sinn Fein website does indeed have an RSS feed. The feed is available at http://www.sinnfein.ie/news/ in the side-bar. My apologies to Sinn Fein for any inconvenience caused by this ommission.

    Have thoughts on this post? Head over and leave a comment on the blog: eGovernment Accessibility Analysis

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    Golden Spider Awards – The Resultshttp://www.redcardinal.ie/browsers/24-11-2006/golden-spiders-not-very-excellent/ http://www.redcardinal.ie/browsers/24-11-2006/golden-spiders-not-very-excellent/#comments Fri, 24 Nov 2006 13:23:41 +0000 http://www.redcardinal.ie/webdev/24-11-2006/golden-spiders-not-very-excellent/ The entries this year were outstanding and testament to the strength of the Irish internet industry. These awards provide an important opportunity to recognise and showcase online excellence.

    Mr. Cathal Magee, MD eircom

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    Last night the ‘Internet Oscars’ took place in Dublin. I’ve been trying to find out the results. The Golden Spider website is still selling tickets :mrgreen:

    So i found the results over at Silicon Republic:

    1. AOL Best Financial Website
      Winner: aib.ie/personal
    2. SalesOnLine.ie Best Travel, Tourism & Hospitality Website
      Winner: hostelworld.com
    3. Daft.ie Best News, Media & Entertainment Website
      Winner: RTE.ie
    4. Comreg Best Sports, Health and Leisure Website
      Winner: RTE.ie/sport
    5. FÁS Best Social Networking, Community & Not For Profit Website
      Winner: trocaire.org
    6. RTÉ Best Education Website
      Winner: gaelscoildehide.ie
    7. HostelWorld.com Best Marketing Campaign
      Winner: carbuyersguide.ie
    8. Department of Communications Best Web Design Agency
      Winner: clearscape.ie
    9. IEDR Best Technology Innovation Award
      Winner: cashcollector.com
    10. Allianz Best Retail Website
      Winner: gohop.ie
    11. Cash Collector Best Professional Services Website
      Winner: Raymondpotterton.com
    12. Irish Jobs Best e-Business Website
      Winner: Myhome.ie
    13. ArgusCarHire.Com Best New Website Launched in 2006
      Winner: moviestar.ie
    14. Best Broadband Application Award
      Winner: tg4.ie
    15. Arekibo Best Public Sector Website
      Winner: callcosts.ie
    16. Red Ribbon.ie Best HR, Training and Recruitment Website
      Winner: monster.ie
    17. Internet Hero 2006 Award
      Winner: Cormac Callanan
    18. Eircom 2006 Golden Spiders Grand Prix Award
      Winner: RTE.ie

    Well done to all the winners.

    Cathal Magee, managing director of eircom commented:

    The entries this year were outstanding and testament to the strength of the Irish internet industry. These awards provide an important opportunity to recognise and showcase online excellence.

    [Emphasis mine]

    I have to say that my research begs to differ with you Mr. Magee.

    Have thoughts on this post? Head over and leave a comment on the blog: Golden Spider Awards – The Results

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    If I Had Taken My Own Advice….http://www.redcardinal.ie/browsers/16-11-2006/corkcorp-internet-explorer-7/ http://www.redcardinal.ie/browsers/16-11-2006/corkcorp-internet-explorer-7/#comments Thu, 16 Nov 2006 08:10:48 +0000 http://www.redcardinal.ie/webdev/16-11-2006/corkcorp-internet-explorer-7/ I wouldn't have this to write about :D

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    I am now the (proud?) owner of Internet Explorer 7. Had I taken my own advice I’d still be able to view the Cork City Council website. But, hey, I have automatic updates to thank for this post :mrgreen:

    Ok, so the story about Cork City Council winning a 2005 Golden Spider is old news. And everyone knows that their site’s only happy in IE:

    corkcorp.ie Firfox 2.0

    The text is a wee bit small in that shot, so let me quote the warning in the footer:

    Due to browser compatibility issues at present, this site will only operate correctly by using Microsoft Internet Explorer 5.5 or greater

    and then I’m offered a link to ‘upgrade?’.

    Well that’s all fine and dandy. So how about the site in Internet Explorer 7:

    corkcorp.ie IE7

    I think they need to rewrite their warning to:

    Due to browser compatibility issues at present, this site will only operate correctly by using Microsoft Internet Explorer 5.5 to 6.0

    *If* they are sniffing the browser, they must be doing it server-side. Actually, requesting with an IE6 user-agent still returns the upgrade link.

    And considering that IE7 is now a high priority update, they might want to try and sort this out.

    Honestly, how can a site that only works in IE 5.5 – 6.0 be given an award for ‘Best Public Sector Website – Local’?

    I am now relatively sure that standards and compatibility are not criteria in any part of the Golden Spiders judging process.

    Does anyone know if corkcorp.ie was built in-house or contracted out?

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    Did Tax-Payers Money Pay For This?http://www.redcardinal.ie/general/15-11-2006/bad-accessibility-website/ http://www.redcardinal.ie/general/15-11-2006/bad-accessibility-website/#comments Wed, 15 Nov 2006 09:27:06 +0000 http://www.redcardinal.ie/general/15-11-2006/bad-accessibility-website/ What you do with your private website is entirely up to you.

    But what happens when it's a public website we're talking about?

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    I have to say that I come across some shocking websites most days. But today I have come across a site that makes me somewhat annoyed:

    Bus Eireann Homepage

    Bus Eireann is a wholly-owned subsidiary of C.I.E., which in turn has a single shareholder – the Irish Government. In 2005 C.I.E. received €283.4m of tax-payer funds to supplement their operating cash flow.

    The C.I.E. group website makes reference to it’s accessibility credentials:

    CIE Group Accessibility Page

    When I first entered the Bus Eireann site a noticed that the root directory was redirecting with a 302 header to site/, and the site/ directory was, you guessed it, redirecting with a 302 to site/home/.

    I spidered 17 pages of the Bus Eireann site for validation. The 17 pages contained 2205 errors and 230 links to files producing either 404 or 302 response codes. The homepage is framed.

    But I think the jewel here is the icon in the navigation bar on the left of the page:

    Bus Eireann Vision Impaired Icon

    Here’s the mark-up behind that particular image:

    <div align="left">
    <a onmouseover="MM_swapImage('Image28','','[...]',1)" onmouseout="MM_swapImgRestore()" href="../home/vip_index.asp">
    <img width="205" height="43" border="0" src="[...]" name="Image28"/>
    </a>
    </div>

    [Note: I removed the paths to the image files for admin purposes.]

    I am curious how any visually impaired person is expected to find this link? If I use a text reader it has no idea what that link is for. The ALT attribute is omitted on each of the navigation images – to any screen reader those image anchors effectively mean nothing.

    I won’t even start on the design….

    [Thank you CreativeIreland.com for the inspiration :grin:]

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    The Quick & Easy Guide to Better HTMLhttp://www.redcardinal.ie/browsers/12-11-2006/internet-marketing-strategies/ http://www.redcardinal.ie/browsers/12-11-2006/internet-marketing-strategies/#comments Sun, 12 Nov 2006 09:27:50 +0000 http://www.redcardinal.ie/webdev/12-11-2006/internet-marketing-strategies/ We all want them. Visitors have a better experience. Searchers find what they're looking for. Site owners enjoy more prosperity. And the Internet community have something to pour praise on. So what's holding Ireland's websites back?

    Have thoughts on this post? Head over and leave a comment on the blog: The Quick & Easy Guide to Better HTML

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    We all want good looking websites that work well for our visitors. Happy visitors = happy site owners. But what happens when the code that runs your website is so poor that it breaks the design in some browsers? Or worse still, keeps some visitors out of your site altogether?

    Bring on the code

    It’s all about the code. Writing good code is easy. When you know how, that is. Behind every website you view are a number of coding technologies that make things tick. Hyper-Text Mark-up Language (HTML) and Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) are probably the most important and common of these, and form the backbone of virtually every web page.

    So many ways to view

    With a variety of browsers (Internet Explorer, Firefox, Safari etc.) and an increasing number of platforms (pc, tv, hand held devices etc.), the need for a consistent user experience has never been more important.

    That’s where standards come into the equation. At their most basic level, web standards exist so that the widest set of users can access and use your data via the broadest number of channels.

    What’s the fly in the ointment?

    Web standards seem to be very elusive for many websites on the Internet today.

    After testing the Golden Spiders nominees, I thought it might be helpful to detail the top coding problems that ‘broke’ so many of the websites considered to be Ireland’s best.

    (Some of the following is somewhat technical, so you can skip to my conclusions if you wish.)

    1. Document Type Definition

      Every HTML document should contain a Document Type Definition (DTD) before the <html> tag. The DTD tells the User Agent which rendering mode to use when displaying the page.
      The most common DTD DOCTYPEs currently in use are:

      <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN"
      "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">

      <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01//EN"
      "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/strict.dtd">

      <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Frameset//EN"
      "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/frameset.dtd">

      <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN"
      "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd">

      <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Frameset//EN"
      "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/frameset.dtd">

      <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Frameset//EN"
      "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-frameset.dtd">

      If your website doesn’t contain something similar to one of the above on every page then it will not validate.

      It is possible to use proprietary attributes and still ensure validation. To do so your site should carry a custom DTD. More details on custom DTD schema can be found here.

    2. Character Encoding

      Character encoding tells the browser what characters the page will be displaying to the user. Remember that visitors can originate anywhere on the globe, and not all will use Latin characters.

      Letting the browser know the Character Encoding required (or ‘charset’) can be achieved in two ways:
      1. within the HTTP header sent by the server (e.g. using .htaccess on Apache);
      2. within the HTML document header, e.g.:

      <META HTTP-EQUIV="Content-Type" CONTENT="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1">

      It is extremely important that if set by both the server, through the HTTP headers, and within the HEAD section of a HTML page that the charsets match. A mismatch will invalidate the page.

      If you want to test your site this tool will show you whether the charset is set on your page.

    3. Closed or self-closing tags

      If you look at the code behind any web page you will see a bunch of tags like

      <div><a href="www.somesite.com">Click here</a></div>

      Most recent HTML specifications require tags to be closed. So you can see in the example that there was an opening <div> followed by an opening <a> (with a href attribute set), some text, and then the closing </a> followed by a final </div>.

      So each tag was opened and then closed. Notice also that the tags were nested. The closing </a> preceded the closing </div>. Had it been any other way the code would not validate.

      XHTML requires all tags to be closed or self-closing. So it is important to ensure that all your elements are closed, e.g. <head [...] /> or <div> [...] </div>.

    4. Lower case tags

      The XHTML 1.0 specification requires that all element and attribute tags be in lower case. So if your document uses a XHTML DTD then you can not use a mix of upper and lower case mark-up throughout your document.

      Whenever I see mixed case mark-up I immediately think of ‘cut ‘n paste’ coding, which in my view is an extremely lazy and dangerous way to author web pages. If you are going to cut and paste, you have 10 times more reasons to validate your page afterwards.

      If you take a look at the source code of your own web pages (in IE6 select Tools->View Source, IE7 select Page->View Source, FF2 View->Page Source) and see something like this:

      <head>
      <title>...</title>
      <META HTTP-EQUIV="TITLE" CONTENT="...">
      <META NAME="KEYWORDS" CONTENT="...">
      <META NAME="DESCRIPTION" CONTENT="...">
      <META NAME="ROBOTS" CONTENT="index, follow">
      <META NAME="AUTHOR" CONTENT="...">
      <META HTTP-EQUIV="Content-Type" CONTENT="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">
      <META HTTP-EQUIV="PRAGMA" CONTENT="no-cache">
      <link href="..." type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" media="all">
      <link href="..." type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" media="all">
      </head>

      I would be slightly concerned about the overall quality and standard of coding produced by your development team / design agency.

      (The fact that this style of coding appeared in some of the nominee sites for ‘Best Web Design Agency’ is somewhat disconcerting.)

    5. Proprietary tags, attributes and CSS

      Unfortunately in the early days of the Internet the browser vendors were less interested in standards (*glances at IE*). This led to a number of proprietary tags and attributes coming into existence. Recent years have seen considerable improvements to the browsers we use. Unfortunately many designers and developers have not kept pace with the times.

      Generally, the use of proprietary code has one major outcome – the code will only work in one brand of browser. While Internet Explorer enjoyed 95% dominance of the browser market during the 1990′s this was fine. But now that new standards-compliant browsers such as Firefox have a 15-20% market share, you can understand why proprietary code has become such an important issue.

      For example, the use of leftmargin, topmargin, marginwidth or marginheight attributes in the body tag involves proprietary code. Similarly, the embed tag is a proprietary tag.

      If you would like to see an excellent example of what can happen when a web site works only in one browser take a glimpse at what happened Enterprise Ireland.

    6. CSS Hacks

      Unfortunately different browser platforms have a nasty habit of rendering content in non-standard ways (*glances again at IE*). It’s a feature of life that hacks are often required to make pages render consistently cross-browser.

      Placing hacks in CSS files has a nasty habit of breaking any validation performed on that file. A far more effective way to introduce hacks is to use conditional includes.

      Conditional includes are special commands that are only read by Microsoft browsers. Such an include might look like:

      <!--[if lt IE 7]>
      <link href="path/to/IE/lte6/stylesheet.css" media="all" rel="Stylesheet" type="text/css" />
      <![endif]-->

      For a good guide to using conditional includes and their syntax see quirksmode.org.

    7. WCAG Accessibility

      They say that the Internet is a great levelling ground. Not just for business, but also for people with disabilities. That’s why Accessible web pages are so important.

      WCAG 1.0 and Section 508 are the most common accessibility standards used on the web today. They dictate certain coding requirements that apply to accessible web pages. For instance:

      All image elements must contain an ALT attribute. Even spacer images must contain at the least an empty ALT attribute – alt="";

      And a very common error is the omission of proper labels for form elements:

      Form input elements should be accompanied by a corresponding label, e.g. <label for="fname">First Name</label><input type="text" name="firstname" id="fname">

      If you would like to learn more about Accessibility please visit WAI. diveintoaccessibility.org/ offers an excellent primer on web site accessible.

    8. Legal Color Names

      Many people don’t realise that there are just sixteen legal color names in HTML 4.x and XHTML. If you use color names in your mark-up and they don’t appear in the following list your document will not validate, and you run the risk of inconsistent rendering across browsers/platforms.

      The Legal Color Names (with HEX values):

      Aqua (#00FFFF)
      Black (#000000)
      Blue (#0000FF)
      Fuchsia (#FF00FF)
      Gray (#808080)
      Green (#008000)
      Lime (#00FF00)
      Maroon (#800000)
      Navy (#000080)
      Olive (#808000)
      Purple (#800080)
      Red (#FF0000)
      Silver (#C0C0C0)
      Teal (#008080)
      White (#FFFFFF)
      Yellow (#FFFF00)

    9. Unescaped special characters

      Unfortunately certain characters have a special meaning to the computers that run the Internet. In particular the ampersand (&) and the less-than and greater-than characters (<, >) cause problems when they are left unescaped.

      The inclusion of these characters on your HTML page will invalidate the mark-up. In all cases they should be properly escaped to either their equivalent HTML entity or ISO Latin-1 code. In the case of the ampersand &amp; or &#38;, less-than &lt; or &#60;, and greater-than &gt; or &62;.

      For a full list of HTML special characters see here.

    So what’s the solution?

    My own personal opinion is that those responsible for coding and designing websites need to take web standards more seriously.

    The fact that web sites nominated for ‘Best Web Design Agency’ failed to validate (and one or two had truly awful coding) is indicative of the wider issues faced by Ireland’s Internet community.

    On the other side of the fence, those commissioning new sites should start to consider, as a decision criterion, the quality of the underlying code and the impact on areas such as Accessibility and compatibility poor code can have.

    Design and development briefs should include web standards as a requirement. In fact this is one of the easiest metrics to collect for subsequent evaluation.

    Failing the above I think a quote from theMenace is particularly apt:

    If we don’t have regulation (which we never really can) then we need 1) peer honesty and 2) client education.

    Well said.

    Have thoughts on this post? Head over and leave a comment on the blog: The Quick & Easy Guide to Better HTML

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    Golden Spider Awards – Are These Really Ireland’s Best Websites?http://www.redcardinal.ie/css/06-11-2006/golden-spiders/ http://www.redcardinal.ie/css/06-11-2006/golden-spiders/#comments Mon, 06 Nov 2006 20:37:20 +0000 http://www.redcardinal.ie/webdev/06-11-2006/golden-spiders/ The full results from the accessibility and standards compliance analysis of all websites short-listed for the 2006 Golden Spiders awards.

    Have thoughts on this post? Head over and leave a comment on the blog: Golden Spider Awards – Are These Really Ireland’s Best Websites?

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    Here are the results of the validation tests:

    Total Sample: 128 sites;
    Valid CSS: 33 (26%);
    Valid HTML: 12 (9%);
    Valid Section 508: 28 (22%);
    Valid WCAG 1.0 Priority 1: 26 (20%);
    Valid WCAG 1.0 Priority 2: 4 (3%);
    Valid WCAG 1.0 Priority 3: 3 (2%);
    Valid TV Core: 37 (29%);
    Valid TV HTML: 15 (12%);
    Valid TV WCAG 1.0 Priority 1: 43 (34%);
    Valid WAVE Overlay: 27 (21%);
    Sites with consistent mark-up: 76 (59%);

    CSS, HTML, Section 508 & WCAG 1.0 Priority 1 Compliant: 6 (5%)

    Special mention should be made of both www.ssiaoptions.ie and www.ulsterbank.ie. Both sites validated to WCAG 1.0 Priority 3 standard and require only limited changes in order to become fully compliant with all tests conducted.

    And just one final piece of analysis:

    Golden Spiders validation testing

    Update as per Ricardo’s suggestion

    Golden Spiders Coding Analysis

    This analysis was born from the comments left in this thread about W3C standards compliant coding.

    Have thoughts on this post? Head over and leave a comment on the blog: Golden Spider Awards – Are These Really Ireland’s Best Websites?

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    Golden Spiders Analysis Noteshttp://www.redcardinal.ie/css/06-11-2006/golden-spiders-analysis-notes/ http://www.redcardinal.ie/css/06-11-2006/golden-spiders-analysis-notes/#comments Mon, 06 Nov 2006 20:37:10 +0000 http://www.redcardinal.ie/webdev/06-11-2006/golden-spiders-analysis-notes/ Notes to accompany my analysis.

    Have thoughts on this post? Head over and leave a comment on the blog: Golden Spiders Analysis Notes

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    The notes to accompany my analysis:

    #1 Framed Site
    #2 Unable to test framed site in WAVE
    #3 Very minor issue possibly from CMS
    #4 Site not accessible without JavaScript enabled
    #5 Very minor error in CSS
    #6 Very minor omission
    #7 In-line CSS could not be validated
    #8 In-line CSS could not be validated
    #9 Parser failed to access file
    #10 Parser could not access file – possibly behind a firewall
    #11 No CSS used on page
    #12 Flash Website with no HTML alternative
    #13 Parser failed to parse file.
    #14 No CSS used on page
    #15 Could not validate – maybe __VIEWSTATE value?
    #16 Validation errors were caused by non-critical image elements. But ALT attribute was missing not empty.
    #17 LABEL for attribute != input ID attribute
    #18 Empty LABEL tag
    #19 WAVE couldn’t parse page overlay
    #20 Cynthia – HTTP Transfer Error – 12007: [12007] Internet Name Not Resolved.

    Have thoughts on this post? Head over and leave a comment on the blog: Golden Spiders Analysis Notes

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    Golden Spiders Take #4http://www.redcardinal.ie/css/06-11-2006/golden-spiders-accessibility-study-take-4/ http://www.redcardinal.ie/css/06-11-2006/golden-spiders-accessibility-study-take-4/#comments Mon, 06 Nov 2006 20:36:57 +0000 http://www.redcardinal.ie/webdev/06-11-2006/golden-spiders-accessibility-study-take-4/ Here are the results for those websites short-listed in categories 13 - 16.

    Have thoughts on this post? Head over and leave a comment on the blog: Golden Spiders Take #4

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    Here are the final categories 13 through 16 of the Golden Spiders Awards short-list. These categories take in ‘Best Website Launched in 2006′, ‘Best Broadband Application’, ‘Best Public Sector Website’ and ‘Best HR, Training & Recruitment Website’.

    The Golden Spiders Accessibility Results, Categories 13-16

    Golden Spiders categories 13-16
    (NB You can click on the image for a larger version.)

    The final four categories contained 29 websites of which 1 passed the benchmark for standards compliance – www.primaryscience.ie.

    I will post a complete ranking overview of the final results shortly.

    Have thoughts on this post? Head over and leave a comment on the blog: Golden Spiders Take #4

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    Golden Spiders Take #3http://www.redcardinal.ie/css/06-11-2006/golden-spiders-accessibility-study-take-3/ http://www.redcardinal.ie/css/06-11-2006/golden-spiders-accessibility-study-take-3/#comments Mon, 06 Nov 2006 09:21:16 +0000 http://www.redcardinal.ie/webdev/06-11-2006/golden-spiders-accessibility-study-take-3/ These results cover websites short-listed in categories 9 through 12.

    Have thoughts on this post? Head over and leave a comment on the blog: Golden Spiders Take #3

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    Categories 9 through 12 in the Golden Spiders cover ‘Best Technology Innovation Website’, ‘Best Retail Website’, ‘Best Professional Services Website’ and ‘Best e-Business’.

    Please note that I have made a very slight change to the legends used. ‘DUAL-CASE’ has been changed to ‘SINGLE-CASE’ to denote the use of consistent type-case throughout the HTML document.

    The Golden Spiders Accessibility Results, Categories 9-12

    Golden Spiders categories 9-12
    (NB Again you can click on the image for a larger version.)

    In these four categories no websites fully passes the benchmark for standards compliance.

    Quite notable, however, was the Professional Services category. Four of the eight sites short-listed passed both Section 508 and WCAG 1.0 Priority 1. A number of these sites also displayed high coding standards.

    It is possible that the professional service firms may have a better grasp of the accessibility standards. This may be due to the inherently human nature of many of these businesses.

    Categories 9, 10 and 12 contain primarily Internet-based businesses. Thus far these categories are tending toward the least standards compliant.

    These are the latest running totals (1-12):

    Total Sample: 99 sites;
    Valid CSS: 26 (26%);
    Valid HTML: 10 (10%);
    Valid Section 508: 20 (20%);
    Valid WCAG 1.0 Priority 1: 18 (18%);
    Valid WCAG 1.0 Priority 2: 4 (4%);
    Valid WCAG 1.0 Priority 3: 3 (3%);
    Valid TV Core: 32 (32%);
    Valid TV HTML: 11 (11%);
    Valid TV WCAG 1.0 Priority 1: 32 (32%);
    Valid WAVE Overlay: 23 (23%);
    Sites with consistent mark-up: 59 (59%);
    CSS, HTML, Section 508 & WCAG 1.0 Priority 1 COMPLIANT: 3 (3%).

    Have thoughts on this post? Head over and leave a comment on the blog: Golden Spiders Take #3

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    Golden Spiders Take #2http://www.redcardinal.ie/css/05-11-2006/golden-spiders-accessibility-study-take-2/ http://www.redcardinal.ie/css/05-11-2006/golden-spiders-accessibility-study-take-2/#comments Sun, 05 Nov 2006 12:19:52 +0000 http://www.redcardinal.ie/webdev/05-11-2006/golden-spiders-accessibility-study-take-2/ This is the second batch of results for the analysis of the Golden Spiders short-listed websites.

    This sample includes the Best Web Design Agency category.

    Have thoughts on this post? Head over and leave a comment on the blog: Golden Spiders Take #2

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    [UPDATE After reviewing the data I have changed chart to reflect the high compliance of mhc.thelearningcentre.ie and www.primaryscience.ie as each had only 2 minor encoding issues with ampersands and brackets within text elements.]

    After a somewhat disillusioning start to my analysis of the Golden Spiders short-listed websites I’m quite sure that things will be getting better.

    The next 4 categories include the Best Web Design Agency group and they, being experts in this field, are more likely to have a higher compliance with coding and accessibility standards.

    I wont go into the methodology used, full details of which are included in my first report (Golden Spiders Take #1).

    The Golden Spiders Accessibility Results, Categories 5-8

    Golden Spiders categories 5-8
    (NB Again you can click on the image for a larger version.)

    In categories 5 not one single site passed the coding and accessibility tests performed, while category 6 entertained two sites which had virtually 100% compliance (each had un-encoded ampersands or brackets within text elements).

    Category 7 showed some promise. bluecubeinteractive.com/property_news was fully code and accessibility compliant (although the page in question is very, very basic), and I have to tip my hat to Ulster Bank – their site was WCAG 1.0 Priority 3 compliant and the two failed tests were nominal at best (1 hours work and this could be one of the most code-compliant sites in the land).

    A note about this methodology

    It is worth stating at this time that the tests I perform are in no way meant to be full audits of these websites’ accessibility levels. Such testing requires a more wholesome array of tests which would include subjective evaluation. My methodology is restrained purely to those tests that can be automated and require no subjective input.

    Best Web Design Agency category

    The Web Design category short-list contains those design agencies who, as experts in their field, should have the highest knowledge of both coding and accessibility disciplines. Well done to Lightbox.ie and Tower.ie who both achieved a very high level of compliance with the coding and accessibility standards. To be fair, a number of the failed tests in this category were marginal and those pages could be easily repaired.

    Unfortunately, I was particularly surprised at the results for Magico.ie and Strata3.com. Both pages analysed displayed an extremely high level of coding errors.

    One final notable point was the proliferation of dual-case coding. By this I mean the coding of some tags in lower case and others in capital or upper-case. Generally, although not always, this is a sign of ‘cut-and-paste’ re-use of old code.

    Overview of categories 5-8

    Within the second sample of 34 websites there was an improvement in coding and accessibility standards. ThreeFive sites fully conformed with the accessibility guidelines. A special mention of the Ulster Bank site is also worthy.

    This is the latest update to the running totals:

    Total Sample: 66 sites;
    Valid CSS: 18 (27%);
    Valid HTML: 8 (12%);
    Valid Section 508: 15 (23%);
    Valid WCAG 1.0 Priority 1: 13 (20%);
    Valid WCAG 1.0 Priority 2: 3 (5%);
    Valid WCAG 1.0 Priority 3: 3 (5%);
    Valid TV Core: 22 (33%);
    Valid TV HTML: 9 (14%);
    Valid TV WCAG 1.0 Priority 1: 24 (36%);
    Valid WAVE Overlay: 18 (27%);
    Sites with consistent mark-up: 33 (49%);
    CSS, HTML, Section 508 & WCAG 1.0 Priority 1 COMPLIANT: 5 (8%).

    Further updates will appear shortly. Again, any feedback on this is greatly appreciated.

    Have thoughts on this post? Head over and leave a comment on the blog: Golden Spiders Take #2

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    Golden Spiders Take #1http://www.redcardinal.ie/css/05-11-2006/golden-spiders-accessibility-study-take-1/ http://www.redcardinal.ie/css/05-11-2006/golden-spiders-accessibility-study-take-1/#comments Sun, 05 Nov 2006 09:25:12 +0000 http://www.redcardinal.ie/webdev/05-11-2006/golden-spiders-accessibility-study-take-1/ The Golden Spiders are billed as Ireland's 'Oscars' for the Internet industry. With over 100 websites nominated I decided to take a look at the accessibility and coding standards of each site.

    Here's the first batch of results.

    Have thoughts on this post? Head over and leave a comment on the blog: Golden Spiders Take #1

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    It’s Awards time again. The Golden Spiders are fast approaching and it seems appropriate to pay respect to the the best of Ireland’s Internet industry. A think a quotation from the official Golden Spiders website sums up what this event is all about:

    The eircom Golden Spiders are widely regarded as the oscars of the internet industry and were established exactly this day 10 years ago – to reward excellence in design, functionality, creativity and innovation in Ireland’s internet industry.

    After receiving some feedback on this issue, I thought it might be appropriate to conduct a small study into one particular area of web design that is not alluded to directly, but is extremely important – ACCESSIBILITY.

    But first a word on my methodology

    It is generally accepted that objective measures of accessibility are defined relative to global standards as set out by the World Wide Web Consortium and other bodies.

    The W3C has responsibility for the Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI) and also sits on the advisory commission for the revision of U.S. Section 508 standards. The WAI maintained Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) and U.S. Section 508 are the accepted international standards for Web accessibility measurement.

    Validation of Mark-Up and CSS

    Alongside these accessibility standards it is a generally accepted wisdom that valid mark-up (the code that runs all web pages) is a best practice for ensuring standardised delivery across client platforms.

    The Study

    Using the URLs listed at www.goldenspiders.ie I set about constructing a testing mechanism to appraise the accessibility and coding practices of the short-listed websites.

    Each site underwent the following tests:

    1. W3C CSS validation service (here);
    2. W3C Markup Validation Service v0.7.3 (here);
    3. HiSoftware Cynthia Says Section 508 Validation service (here);
    4. HiSoftware Cynthia Says WCAG 1.0 Priority 1 Validation service (here);
    5. HiSoftware Cynthia Says WCAG 1.0 Priorities 1&2 Validation service (here);
    6. HiSoftware Cynthia Says WCAG 1.0 Priorities 1&2&3 Validation service (here);
    7. Total Validator Professional desktop HTML & Accessibility validation tool (available here);
    8. WAVE WCAG 1.0 and Section 508 visual site overlay tool (here);
    9. Manual inspection of the mark-up to identify ‘cut-and-paste’ coding.

    3 separate tools were used to assess the accessibility of each page short-listed for the Golden Spider Awards. This methodology conforms to the best practice as set out by the WAI. No other pages within those sites were tested for this study.

    The Golden Spiders Accessibility Results, Categories 1-4

    Golden Spiders categories 1-4
    (NB Click on the image for a larger version.)

    Legend

    • CSS = CSS validation;
    • HTML = HTML validation;
    • Section 508 = Section 508 validation;
    • WCAG 1.0 1 = WCAG 1.0 Priority 1 validation;
    • WCAG 1.0 1,2 = WCAG 1.0 Priorities 1 and 2 validation;
    • WCAG 1.0 1,2,3 = WCAG 1.0 Proriteis 1, 2 and 3 validation;
    • TV Core = Total Validation Core Errors;
    • TV HTML = Total Validation HTML Errors;
    • TV WCAG 1.0 Priority 1 = Total Validation WCAG Priority 1 Errors;
    • WAVE wcag 1.0, 508 = WAVE 3.0 site overlay WCAG 1.0 Priority 1 and Section 508 Validation;
    • DUAL-CASE = Analysis of page mark-up to identify the use of both upper-case and lower-case element tags. This can identify ‘cut-and-paste’ coding . It can also be the result of Content Management Systems or the use of third party code (e.g. Google Analytics scripts).

    Of this initial sample of 32 websites one site comes close to fully conforming to the accessibility guidelines. In fact www.ssiaoptions.ie actually conformed to the highest level of WCAG 1.0 – Priorities 1, 2 and 3. Although the site’s CSS failed to validate it is an extremely accessible website.

    Results Categories 1-4 Overview

    Total Sample: 32 sites;
    Valid CSS: 9 (28%);
    Valid HTML: 2 (6%);
    Valid Section 508: 4 (13%);
    Valid WCAG 1.0 Priority 1: 3 (9%);
    Valid WCAG 1.0 Priority 2: 2 (6%);
    Valid WCAG 1.0 Priority 3: 2 (6%);
    Valid TV Core: 10 (31%);
    Valid TV HTML: 1 (3%);
    Valid TV WCAG 1.0 Priority 1: 9 (28%);
    Valid WAVE Overlay: 7 (22%);
    Sites with consistent mark-up: 16 (50%);
    CSS, HTML, Section 508 & WCAG 1.0 Priority 1 COMPLIANT: 0 (0%).

    [I updated the above overview at 12:30pm Nov 5 to correct an error in the 'No. of sites with consistent mark-up' and also to include the figure for 'Zero visible WAVE Errors'. Second update at 10:45pm Nov 5 to correct some figures and typos in the overview.]

    I would be very interested to hear any views you might have on the above. Further results will be posted later today.

    Have thoughts on this post? Head over and leave a comment on the blog: Golden Spiders Take #1

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    If You’re Going To Promote Your W3C Credentials…http://www.redcardinal.ie/css/02-11-2006/w3c-standards-complaint-website/ http://www.redcardinal.ie/css/02-11-2006/w3c-standards-complaint-website/#comments Thu, 02 Nov 2006 09:06:03 +0000 http://www.redcardinal.ie/webdev/02-11-2006/w3c-standards-complaint-website/ Any web designer touting "compliant coding standards" as a USP should do just one thing before he does so - validate your own website first.

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    …at least make sure your website validates.

    Without naming names I came across an Irish web design company (offering SEO of course) that touted their W3C credentials:

    W3C compliant design

    Professional web site design using CSS and XHTML to W3C standards.

    Suffice it to say the W3C Validator didn’t agree.

    In fact it almost got sick :mrgreen::

    # Error Line 1 column 0: no document type declaration; implying “< !DOCTYPE HTML SYSTEM>“.
    # Error Line 13 column 6: required attribute “TYPE” not specified.
    # Error Line 52 column 16: there is no attribute “TOPMARGIN”.
    # Error Line 52 column 31: there is no attribute “LEFTMARGIN”.
    # Error Line 241 column 123: there is no attribute “BORDERCOLOR”.
    # Error Line 241 column 140: there is no attribute “HEIGHT”.
    # Error Line 259 column 69: required attribute “ALT” not specified.
    # Error Line 263 column 69: required attribute “ALT” not specified.
    # Error Line 266 column 27: there is no attribute “BACKGROUND”.
    # Error Line 266 column 27: an attribute value must be a literal unless it contains only name characters.
    # Error Line 268 column 91: required attribute “ALT” not specified.
    # Error Line 276 column 69: required attribute “ALT” not specified.
    # Error Line 294 column 34: document type does not allow element “DIV” here; missing one of “APPLET”, “OBJECT”, “MAP”, “IFRAME”, “BUTTON” start-tag.
    # Error Line 301 column 34: document type does not allow element “DIV” here; missing one of “APPLET”, “OBJECT”, “MAP”, “IFRAME”, “BUTTON” start-tag.
    # Error Line 307 column 20: document type does not allow element “DIV” here; missing one of “APPLET”, “OBJECT”, “MAP”, “IFRAME”, “BUTTON” start-tag.
    # Error Line 313 column 20: document type does not allow element “DIV” here; missing one of “APPLET”, “OBJECT”, “MAP”, “IFRAME”, “BUTTON” start-tag.
    # Error Line 319 column 20: document type does not allow element “DIV” here; missing one of “APPLET”, “OBJECT”, “MAP”, “IFRAME”, “BUTTON” start-tag.
    # Error Line 342 column 69: required attribute “ALT” not specified.
    # Error Line 354 column 69: required attribute “ALT” not specified.
    # Error Line 358 column 75: required attribute “ALT” not specified.
    # Error Line 386 column 100: value of attribute “ALIGN” cannot be “ABSBOTTOM”; must be one of “TOP”, “MIDDLE”, “BOTTOM”, “LEFT”, “RIGHT”.
    # Error Line 416 column 160: document type does not allow element “TABLE” here; missing one of “APPLET”, “OBJECT”, “MAP”, “IFRAME”, “BUTTON” start-tag.
    # Error Line 535 column 105: required attribute “ALT” not specified.
    # Error Line 608 column 75: required attribute “ALT” not specified.
    # Error Line 612 column 75: required attribute “ALT” not specified.
    # Error Line 680 column 6: end tag for “DIV” omitted, but its declaration does not permit this.

    Now that is just bloody awful. It borders on the criminal. OK, I exaggerate, but leaving out the DOCTYPE is just THE cardinal sin in compliant standard web coding.

    If you’re going to promote W3C standards you should at least practice what you preach.

    Have thoughts on this post? Head over and leave a comment on the blog: If You’re Going To Promote Your W3C Credentials…

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