Web Morphology
[The first in a series of posts on the tools of the Internet.]
My short (5 year) history in UI design and development has been
primarily on the Flash Platform, specifically for experience sites and
web applications. Having been privy to the introduction of Canvas, and
the soon-to-be addition of Audio and Video tags to HTML, as well as
having the curse of being a life long learner, I have spent the last nine
months looking more seriously at JQuery, boning up/using CSS3 and occasionally looking at Silverlight (will be doing that a lot more
very soon), etc.
My 'mission statemen't for this series is that I believe a tool is
a tool is a tool. There are different tools, and none greater
than the next. The only fault someone can have is not having a direct,
working knowledge of a tool and then holding and proliferating an
unfounded opinion about said tool. It is a professionals duty to
understand the how and the why of the tools at their disposal, in my
case for developing User Interface and thus User Experience.
Some tools I want to explore are: Browsers, Flash Platform, HTML5,
CSS3, JQuery, JS, Silverlight, to name a few. I also want to explore
some of the deterministic factors of how we go to where we are.
So, that being said, my first stop is at the fabulous United Nations
of the Web, the W3C.
The W3C is the multinational group that decides the aesthetic fate of
the web, in that they decide what goes in, what gets modified, what
gets deprecated, etc.
The methodology for deciding what is as follows (via Wikipedia):
In accord with the W3C Process Document, a Recommendation progresses
through five maturity levels:
- Working Draft (WD)
- Last Call Working Draft
- Candidate Recommendation (CR)
- Proposed Recommendation (PR)
- W3C Recommendation (REC)
They split up the reach into the following umbrellas: Web for All
(Accessability), Web on Everything (if it's a device, it will access
the web), Web of Consumers and Authors ( Web Design and Architectural
Patterns, Applicaitons), Web of Data and Services (XML, Semantic,
REST), Web of Trust (Privacy, Security). Awesome! They sound like some
very intelligent and thoughtful people. Almost romantic.
There obviously needs to be some dirt to dig up, so I fire up 'trusted
wikipedia' and start there. Ah, there it is, bullet 5, "Criticism". I
guess when you have a group making difficult, far-reaching decisions,
there are bound to be some nay-sayers.
On of the bullets, the "Domination by Large Organizations", is rather
interesting as it implies that a great deal of the decision making
process is influenced by the large corporate constituency, as stated
here by Edd Dumbill ( editor of XML.com ): "I think developers are
being poorly served by the fact that the big companies have dominated
the work of the W3C over the last year. The W3C does more or less what
its members tell it to." Sounds a little ambiguous, but I think a
tangible example would be the push for what protocol / codec etc.
type, say, the tag will use in HTML5. The company that owns
that codec stands to either get a lot of money or a lot of influence
if everyone starts using it. Now it starts to make more sense! It
seems as if corporations play the role of lobbyists in the W3C.
Interesting...
Also found via the wikipedia article, Joe Clark has some pretty
interesting stuff to say on his criticism on the WCAG 2.0 ( Web
Content Accessibility Guidelines ), which was ratified ( is that what
you call it? ) in 2006. Hopefully the process has gotten better, but I
highly doubt it.
Top 5:
5. Too Dense. To quote Joe Clark "When compared against typical page
dimensions in books, the three WCAG 2 documents, at 450 pages, exceed
the size of each of the books published on the topic of WCAG 1,
including mine".
4. Process Is Not Easily Accessible. "After working on WCAG 2 for five
years, WAI gave the entire industry and all interested parties,
including people with disabilities, a whopping 34 days to comment on
WCAG 2"- J.C.
3. If You Don't Speak English And/Or Have A Disability, You Are Not
Involved. "The WCAG development process is inaccessible to anyone who
doesn’t speak English. More importantly, it’s inaccessible to some
people with disabilities, notably anyone with a reading disability
(who must wade through ill-written standards documents and e-mails—
there’s already been a complaint) and anyone who’s deaf (who must
listen to conference calls). Almost nobody with a learning disability
or hearing impairment contributes to the process—because, in practical
terms, they can’t." - J.C.
2. Sometimes Weird and Convoluted. "Your page, or any part of it, may
blink for up to three seconds. Parts of it may not, however, “flash.”
" - J.C.
1. WTF? - "WCAG 1 had three levels of “conformance,” which, in typical
WAI style, were given a total of six names—Priority 1/Level A,
Priority 2/Level AA (annoyingly written as “Double-A” to get around
faulty screen-reader pronunciation), and Priority 3/Level AAA (“Triple-
A”)." - J.C.
Bonus Round : Good Thing The Web Is Not About Multi-Media - WHOOPS!
"For a deaf or a blind person who wants to understand multimedia, WCAG
2 offers no real improvement." - J.C.
Feel free to check out the rest here
Well... to be fair, as I said previously, there will always be nay-
sayers, but at the same time, it does seem like less romantic, more
realistic view of the way things are over there. In summary, there are
two sides to every story, and there is an amount of influence this
body has on implementation of new ways of communication, and like any
group of humans, they are prone to mistake, design by committee, and
instances of over thinking things to the point of convolution. Fair
enough.
Next article, I want to explore what work the "OPEN WEB" movement has
performed in helping fix these foibles.
- Brendan's blog
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