Anyone in Scotland interested in usability, the Scottish Usability Professional's Association has an interesting list of forthcoming events.
The Web Accessibility Primer in May looks particularly interesting. Accessibility has of course been a legal requirement for websites since 1999.
By Craig Cockburn, IT Professional from Scotland. Critical Thinking, Agile Delivery, Politics and Society
Total Pageviews
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Popular Posts
-
I've been having a busy time over on the Cambrian House site lately. Check out my profile and the full set of awards I completed last ...
-
Dyson's motto is "100% suction all the time" or "The vacuum that doesn't lose suction". The consumers' assoc...
-
It has always surprised me that in the US, where holidays are valued and children get about 6 weeks more annual holiday than the UK, that ad...
-
Why I won't be supporting England in the World Cup It's the sign of a nation that never really grows up that every 4 years we have t...
-
Every time I go to the post office there's a queue. No matter how much they try and keep the queue length down, inevitably you get stuck...
-
I am growing increasingly tired of paying increasingly high "credit card surcharges" which are little more than a front for certai...
-
Introduction You may be wondering the significance of the three Scottish flags in the image. I took this picture a few weeks ago. I...
-
In contrast to my usual relaxed drive to work I was on the motorway today. Tailgaiting seems to have got worse. It's not enough to be ...
-
I thought I would write this to document the ongoing problems I have with my Nokia N97. It seems from the conversation in the phone shop tod...
-
An article on how Agile can sit alongside PRINCE2 and where DSDM Atern fits in. In 2007, I put "used an Agile/PRINCE2 development str...
No comments:
Post a Comment