Posts Tagged ‘web 2.0’

ATAG – ignore it at your peril

Tuesday, February 24th, 2009

A brief history

Most web developers will have heard of the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), especially since the launch of version 2 in December 2008. Perhaps less well known, but just as important, are the Authoring Tool Accessibility Guidelines (ATAG).

The Authoring Tool Accessibility Guidelines (ATAG) documents define how authoring tools should help Web developers produce Web content that is accessible and conforms to the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines. The ATAG documents also explain how to make authoring tools accessible so that people with disabilities can use the tools.

ATAG Overview

Version 1 of ATAG was approved in 2000, so the guidelines are certainly in need of revision. Last week W3C announced a call for review of version 2 of the guidelines, with comments invited until 16th March.

There are two distinct parts to ATAG 2.0:

  • Part A: Making the authoring tool user interface accessible – which includes “principles and associated guidelines that are related to ensuring accessibility of the authoring tool user interface to authors with disabilities“.
  • Part B: Support the production of accessible content – which includes “principles and guidelines related to ensuring support by authoring tools for the creation of accessible Web content by any author (not just those with disabilities) to end users with disabilities“.

Why should we care about ATAG?

I’m currently trying to get my organisation to realise how important ATAG is when it procures a new web CMS later this year. There has been lots of lovely talk of WCAG but we really can’t afford to neglect ATAG in our specifications or we could end up with a product which prevents some of our own staff from publishing content. In such a scenario the cost of making reasonable adjustments later, in accordance with the Disability Discrimination Act (DDA), would be horrendous. We’d potentially be stuck with something that is not fit for purpose.

But there is a far wider significance, brought about by the rise of Web 2.0 which has given everyone the power to be an author. Sites such as Facebook, Twitter and WordPress are all examples of authoring tools – they allow the user to publish content. If such tools are developed in the spirit of ATAG, they will be far more accessible to users who wish to publish to these platforms. Equally, they will assist everyone else in making sure their content is accessible, regardless of their technical knowledge.

ATAG goes hand in hand with WCAG, and both are going to be crucial in the drive towards an inclusive web. ATAG may have once been of interest only to a small audience of software developers, but it now finds itself a vital ingredient in the brave new world of Web 2.0. As the importance of producing accessible content becomes ever clearer, those who ignore ATAG could well find that they are being shunned not only by certain disabled users, by but everyone else too.

Related links

Government 2.0 – current initiatives wiki

Tuesday, December 16th, 2008

I’ve just been looking at a wiki of current initiatives for Goverment 2.0 – that is, government’s use of social media.

At the moment it has a heavy leaning towards US and Canadian initiatives, although there is a smattering of international efforts too. There are some great examples, including:

  • Wikis to improve internal collaboration
  • Geo-tagged images on Flickr
  • Podcasts to reach new audiences
  • Lots of use of Blogs, Facebook, Twitter, Youtube, SecondLife etc etc…

Hopefully this wiki will continue to grow, and the intention is for it to eventually offer best practices. Kudos to Mike Kujawski for creating the wiki, as well as to Jose Alonso (W3C eGovernment Interest Group) for the heads-up.

Staying alert – who’s talking about your site?

Monday, December 15th, 2008

I’ve recently started using Google Alerts:

Google Alerts are email updates of the latest relevant Google results (web, news, etc.) based on your choice of query or topic. Some handy uses of Google Alerts include:

  • monitoring a developing news story
  • keeping current on a competitor or industry
  • getting the latest on a celebrity or event
  • keeping tabs on your favorite sports teams

I set up a number of alerts based on various topics of interest and the emails started coming thick and fast (I opted for ‘as-it-happens’ alert frequency in most cases, but you can also specify daily or weekly digests).

What has been most useful is hearing about the various blogs which are talking about the organisation and its website, as well as seeing which sites are linking to us. A large proportion of the alerts come from news sources too, so I can also keep tabs on the media. Not only is this an important Comms issue, but it is also a crucial step in becoming proactive with Web 2.0 technologies in general

Company Buzz is another interesting application, this time for users of Linkedin. Powered by Twitter, this application pulls in links to sites that are talking about your company (for better or for worse!). It also gives you a list of Buzz Words.

With these sorts of tools, as well as through monitoring prominent local and national blogs, I’m hoping to build up a robust ‘early-warning system’ to help us react to the conversations that are taking place. Once this is well established, I’ll be looking to see how we can work it into our strategies for more effectively engaging with web technologies across the board.

After all, if we wish to engage with the conversations taking place, we need to know where they are and what people are saying.

Scotweb2 Unconference summary

Monday, November 3rd, 2008

I’ll soon be writing more specifically about some of the topics discussed at last Friday’s Scotweb2 Unconference, but wanted to start with a brief summary of the day and some key messages I took from it.

All in all, the day was very uplifting and provided some real food for thought. It succeeded wonderfully in bringing together a small but committed number of Web 2.0 enthusiasts, mostly from the public sector but including a few from the commercial world. Although this meant that much of the discussions were in some way ‘preaching to the converted’, there was still plenty of new ideas to hear about and various calls to action.

Simon Dickson‘s talk exemplified this well. His passion and enthusiasm for WordPress came over in barrel loads, and certainly gave people something to think about when comparing the minimal costs of implementing the open-source blogging CMS compared with some multi-million projects he has seen in central government. It was also a more general rallying call for us to abandon concepts of quality being defined by cost, given that most of the traditional barriers to accessing these technologies are now being increasingly broken down.

James Munro, from Patient Opinion, also delivered an interesting presentation on the relationship between his independent service and the NHS, with plenty of engaging discussion about public perception, trust and the machinations of organisational change through feedback.

Derek Hemphill presented BT Tradespace, which most of the audience confessed to never having heard of. I’ve now set up my free account so will report back about that soon.

Stephen Dale also gave a brief introduction to the Communities of Practice platform for local gov and public sector professionals to develop and share knowledge. Non public sector members are welcome to join in where appropriate, although overt selling is not tolerated. I myself am a member of three forums and am so far enjoying the experience.

As I say, I’ll be writing more about specifics once I’ve had a change to collect my thoughts and notes. Thanks again to Alex Stobart for organising what turned out to be a positive and exciting day of discussion.

WCAG 2.0 and WAI interview

Wednesday, October 22nd, 2008

There’s an interesting article in the latest e-access bulletin, produced by Headstar. As they haven’t yet updated their website with this bulletin, I’ve reproduced the article below. For more information about the bulletin see www.headstar.com/eab.

Global Standards Giant Gears Up For Battle
by Dan Jellinek.

With the long-awaited appearance of version 2 of the World Wide Web Consortium’s Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) now expected in December, the spotlight is set to fall once more on the workings of this key international standards body.

The consortium, known as W3C, was founded in 1994 by the inventor of the web Tim Berners-Lee, who remains its director. It functions as a developer and repository of key technical standards and protocols that are needed to be shared by technology companies and users to ensure that the web remains open and universal.

With a current membership of more than 400 organisations, from large multinational technology companies to universities and charities, W3C has three main global bases: the European Research Consortium for Informatics and Mathematics (ERCIM) at the Sophia Antipolis technology park in the South of France; Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Computer Science and Artificial Technology Laboratory; and Keio University in Japan.

The consortium has a core staff of around 70, with around 30 in Europe, 30 in the US and 10 Japan. But the actual headcount of those involved in its work is more than 500 if a tally is taken of everyone in the consortium’s working groups, interest groups, and the wider community.

The WCAG work falls under the auspices of W3C’s Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI), a programme that cuts across all the consortium’s other areas. In a UK visit last month, two WAI staff Shadi Abou-Zahra and Andrew Arch met E-Access Bulletin in London to explain their work programme.

“WAI is one of the consortium’s main work areas, and cuts across all the W3C’s global locations,” said Abou-Zahra. “One of our tasks is to cross-check all W3C’s work such as that on [the web's core protocol] HTML to check it supports accessibility, because if standards like HTML don’t support accessibility, you won’t have accessible websites.

“This is really one of the most important pieces of work we are doing, though it is the least visible to the outside world. What’s most well- known about WAI’s work is its development of three guidelines – WCAG, ATAG (Authoring Tool Accessibility Guidelines) and UAAG (User Agent Accessibility Guidelines).

Authoring tools guidelines relate to content management systems, and are aimed at ensuring these systems need to create accessible content, while user agents are tools like browsers and media players, Abou- Zahra says.

“Other areas of our work include education and outreach, which is really important, because most people who make inaccessible websites are often unaware of the issues for people with disabilities.”

One major new piece of work undertaken by WAI is the EC-funded WAI-AGE Project ( http://www.w3.org/WAI/WAI-AGE/ ), a look at the implications of an ageing population for web access, given the older people are more likely to have disabilities and may also be less familiar with new technologies.

“Demographics worldwide are dramatically changing at the moment,”
says Andrew Arch, who works with Abou-Zahra on WAI-AGE. “The proportions of older to younger people are changing as well as the numbers. We’re living longer, and we haven’t got the support behind us.

“Lots of things have got to change in governments and organisations – with an ageing workforce, you have to keep learning to stay accessible.”

The WAI-AGE project is partly aimed at finding out whether there are any significant new pieces of work needed to ensure web accessibility for an older population, Arch says.

“We’ve looked at what research and user observation has gone on over the decade. There is a pretty big overlap between older people and others with disabilities – sight starts to decline, motor dexterity – and individually these overlap. But with older people there is often a lack of recognition that there is a disability there. For example some people might just say they can’t remember so well, rather than that they have a cognitive impairment. Or people won’t see failing eye-sight as a disability, it’s just ‘part of growing old’. But they are disabilities, and often multiple disabilities.”

Having gained a grasp of current research the project returned to guidelines such as WCAG 2.0 to see if any changes might be needed.
“A large proportion of the needs of older people are met by the new guidelines, but other things might need to feed into the guidance we will issue on implementing the guidelines, for example guidance on how people prepare content for older people.,” said Arch.

“Many older people have not grown up with computers, and may not realise their capabilities, for example that you can magnify text in your browser.”

However as well as helping to address the problems of ageing it is also important to challenge myths and assumptions about older people such as none of them have any interest or expertise in using computers, says Abou-Zahra. “Social networking is an important part of ageing, for example. And making social networking sites more accessible for older users benefits everybody.”

This argument is a development of the age-old mantra from the accessibility sector that people with disabilities want to use the web in the same way as everybody else – “it is a human right recognised by the UN,” says Abou-Zahra. But he recognizes that businesses in particular will also be interested in the additional business benefits, especially in the current financial climate.

“With commercial organisations the return on investment is often an important argument. Well, a few years ago, companies might have said ‘how many older people are online?’ but with demographics changing they know the answer. And with the current surge in mobile phone use there is another incentive, since accessible sites work better on mobile phones.”

Other financial factors include helping to hold onto employees as their average age rises through making internal web systems more accessible, though more work is needed on in all these areas, he says.
“We know there are not enough numbers attached to these business cases, and we hope for more soon. There is a business case document for accessibility on the WAI website, and we are updating it to reflect new developments.”

For many, however, the key accessibility event of the year – assuming it does scrape into 2008 – will be the release of WCAG 2.0.

The WCAG working group held a face-to-face meeting in Boston at the beginning of October to examine the results of trial implementation of the draft guidelines on real websites, and now expects to finalise WCAG 2.0 as a fully-fledged W3C recommendation by December or at the latest by early next year, Abou-Zahra says.

The first version of the WCAG guidelines now dates back around a decade, and though it has proved a vital tool for raising awareness of accessibility issues it has long been seen as over-technical and complex and unclear in many situations.

Version 2.0 is set to address many of these problems by moving away from rigid technical ‘checkpoints’ to more flexible ‘success criteria.’

Another change of style will be a greater separation between the core guidelines and references to specific technologies such as Javascript or browser types, Abou-Zahra says.

“The work needs to be coupled to technologies, but how do we do that in such a way as to not make it outdated the moment it is released?
This is the complex issue,” he says.

“WCAG 1.0 was too technology-specific. Back then HTML was more dominant, and there was less use of multimedia, but today we have a flurry of technologies such as Ajax, so the first lesson we learned is don’t write for a specific technology. Also, in the days of WCAG 1.0 we had to exclude Javascript because it was not sufficiently standardised and assistive technology could not handle it consistently, but now that has largely changed so you need to include it, to look at how any technology should be accessible. The requirements – such as tagging images with text – needs to apply to any technology you are using.

“So WCAG is more decoupled – but having said that, no matter how much you decouple it from specific technologies, there still need to be points of contact with real technologies, places where the tyre hits the road. It is an issue the group is looking to resolve by updating implementation guidance.”

Another ongoing problem with the WAI web content guidelines is that they do not fully address the needs of people with cognitive disabilities, admits Abou-Zahra, though he says this is a challenging longer term issue that the organisation is working to resolve alongside the wider access community.

“We know it does not fully meet the needs of people with cognitive disabilities such as some forms of learning disabilities, we admit this up-front,” he says. “It is a longer term project, maybe one for WCAG 3.0. I feel this is an issue that the accessibility community as a whole needs to address, more research is needed.”

Beyond the publication of WCAG 2.0, W3C and WAI will continue to prioritise accessibility across all its areas of work, he says. “WAI’s work is often reduced to WCAG in the public eye, but it is a whole lot more than content, it is about making the web accessible in its broadest sense.”

Aberdeenshire Council blog

Wednesday, October 1st, 2008

In September 2008 Aberdeenshire Council’s web team set up a blog in order to communicate with the public and their own staff during the redesign of their corporate website. They asked for comments on the Public Sector Forum and I gave the following feedback:

This is a very interesting approach to gathering user feedback, and also interesting that you have used just one platform for both staff and the general public. It would be interesting to know how you are promoting the blog to the two groups, and whether your rules for comment moderation reflect those potentially disparate audiences.

The most attractive thing for me is that the blog has a very clearly defined raison d’etre. The fact that it will have a finite lifespan (i.e. until the delivery of the new site) means that you’ve set a realistic premise – most open-ended blogs die a death sooner or later which can look very bad for an organisation.

I do wonder whether it might be wise to offer more traditional ways for users to provide feedback as well, though. The blog itself offers no other method of contact – was it a conscious decision not to encourage that? Many users may not have the confidence to submit a comment, to be read and scrutinized by the public at large, and past studies have suggested that about 95% of blog users are ‘lurkers’, never contributing to discussions. There is also a risk that only the more technically-proficient will find and engage with the blog, excluding many of the users for whom your website improvements could most benefit. Perhaps you are planning other forms of outreach to counter these issues?

All in all, though, this looks like a great effort to involve your users from a very early stage of development, when significant change can still be effected without significant cost.

The response to my feedback was positive and very pro-active, with a Contact Us section appearing the next day. I look forward to seeing how this blog develops over the coming months.