Posts filed under ‘Web Development’

Coda Clips

Rogie King tweeted this awesome resource earlier today. I am a huge Coda fan. HTML/CSS/JavaScript/PHP IDE, Terminal, FTP, Site Management, and resources in one great package. One of the cooler features is it’s one-click code clips. I’ve always wanted more, but never bother to create them.

Enter Coda Clips. Find and install (with a click!) a bunch of really handy code clips! should make development pretty speedy.

Leona Tomlinson: Understanding Disabilities when Designing a Website

Leona Tomlinson rounds up a great list of considerations when building a Web site to help ensure that it is actually accessible, rather than systematically meeting a list of guidelines.

…we must look further than the guidelines if we are to create websites which are accessible to users with disabilities and the assistive technologies they rely on.

Target Settles Accessibility Suit for $6mm

And Web accessibility advocates everywhere are completely deflated. I know I’m a couple weeks late on this but I had to chime in. I’ve been following this case over time in hopes that we’d get some clarification to bring the Americans with Disabilities Act in line with the current media landscape.

As with with most settlements, Target admits no wrongdoing, which from a legal standpoint is a fact, even if it isn’t a true statement (odd how that works out, eh?). The Web Standards Project spoke rightly on the lawsuit aspect of the case…

Whatever the legal ramifications may be, those of us who advocate accessibility don’t want to make this into a series of legal battles. There are no winners there. (Okay, besides the lawyers.) We want people to realize that engaging with people with disabilities well before the threat of legal action arises is always the best approach. When a company stalls and takes a case to court, delays, public relations nightmares, and skyrocketing costs are all that happens.

Target wasn’t legally wrong, but their Web developers should be fired. That’s all I’m saying. Lazy, uninformed coding practices hurting Target’s business (denying blind users from purchasing goods online). This isn’t about legal right and wrong, this is about allowing your customers to buy products!

It’s not that hard, folks. There may be resource realities that cause accessibility problems in small, unimportant parts of your site, but when it comes to core functionality you should have you stuff in line.

Target should not be wasting it’s time proving it’s innocence, it’s executive should be chopping heads of those who are keeping their customers from buying their products!

I have written much about Web accessibility in the past, and a few things on this case specifically. Check it out.

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    About Matt

    Matt is currently Lead Designer (and front-end developer) for Weblogs Inc (AOL), Husband, Father, Musician, sometimes contributer at Godbit.com, and Jesus' friend.

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    Web Design
    Design and market your own professional-looking website with easy-to-use tools.