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Introducing The Synchronicity of Indeterminacy

January 17, 2006 by Liz

SOB Directory Entry:
The Synchronicity of Indeterminacy by Indie

Type: Flash Fiction

indeterminacy logo

Professional writer, Indie, combines found photos with one-minute short stories inspired by the photos. The idea is based on John Cage’s Indeterminacy recordings, coupling stories with sound. The stories show elements of avant garde, surrealism, dada, horror, humor, satire, fantasy, etc.

Notes from Liz: Indie’s blog has that fabulous combination of quality content and interaction that makes it a unique and unforgetttable experience. This is not just well-written fiction for your entertainment. This is downright stress relief offered to you in perfect measure.

–ME “Liz” Strauss

Has your SOB Blog Been Introduced to US?
Blog Promotion: May I Introduce You?

Filed Under: Community, Content, SOB Business, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, blog_promotion, Community, content_and_interaction, entrepreneur, flash_fiction, great_read, Indie

How to Code Accessible Links–Part 2

January 17, 2006 by Liz

How to Code an Accessible Image
by Cas of Brightmeadow

Basic code

Just to remind you what the basic image code looks like:
<img src=”http://www.foo.com/image.jpg” />

The ALT description–how it works

The ALT description works in much the same way that the TITLE attribute works for a link. It is inserted after the URL but before the tag is closed and contains descriptive text. Instead of previewing the image when you mouse over though, the ALT attribute is what is read out when someone is using a screen reader. It should describe the content of the image. It is also the ALT text that is displayed by your browser when, for whatever reason, an image fails to load.

Accessible code

<img src=”http://foo.com/image.jpg” alt=”descriptive text” />

When to use

Use descriptive text in the ALT attribute when the image imparts information to the viewer, for example if it contains text like many header images and buttons do.

When to use a null value

There are certain instances when the image being used imparts no information to the reader – for example a spacer.gif (though the practice of using spacer images is now frowned upon). In these instances, consider using the null attribute to make the screen readers ignore the image. To use the null value, simple use alt="" without a space between the quotation marks. Putting a space, or just ignoring the ALT description will result in non-visual readers being told that there is an image, but not being given a description. Highly frustrating!

A few notes

  • The description should not contain the word ‘image’. An image coded as
    <img src=”penguin.jpg” alt=”an image of penguins plotting” />
    will be read out as “IMAGE, an image of penguins plotting” by a screen reader.
    Repetitive. Rather, the text should be something like “penguins plotting another evil plan”.
  • Think carefully about when to use the null attribute. Users who can’t see your decorative or blank images don’t need to hear a description of them.

Meanwhile Cas and I are off to plot a plan of our own, until tomorrow.
–ME “Liz” Strauss

The Complete Series
How to Code Accessible Links
This one: How to Code Accessible Links–Part 1
This one: How to Code Accessible Links–Part 2
How to Code Accessible Links–Part 3

Filed Under: Links, SEO, Successful Blog, Tech/Stats Tagged With: accessibility, bc, blog-promotion, colding-links, personal-branding

How to Code Accessible Links–Part 1

January 16, 2006 by Liz

Cas read my article on how to code hyperlinks and in the comments shared some discussion about the importance of accessible links–a topic which had come up earlier in Successful-Blog conversations. In my usual fashion I invited Cas to write on the subject and she took up the challenge. Her response was to do a series of articles on accessible hyperlinks. I, for one, am so glad she did. She really does know so much more about such things than I do. In fact, she knows so much more that I asked her to start by just clarifying for me what is it that makes an Accessible link. –ME “Liz” Strauss

How to Code Accessible Links–Part One: The Basics
by Cas of Brightmeadow

Liz has already written a great article on how to code hyperlinks. I’d like to take this one further and show you how to code accessible hyperlinks. If you are happy with how to manually code hyperlinks, then we can continue. If you aren’t, or feel like you need a bit of a refresher, I do recommend you read the article. We’ll wait.

Ok, ready?

What is an accessible link?

Web accessibility is about making your website accessible to all Internet users (both disabled and non-disabled), regardless of what browsing technology they’re using. An “accessible link” therefore, is simply a link that imparts as much information to as many users as possible. It enables the reader to preview the link, making an informed decision about whether to follow it or not, and helps to differentiate between links that may share link text but refer to different targets

So why should I worry about accessibility?

Not everyone views the Web in the same way that you do – accessibility is not just for disabled users. It is for the many potential readers who might be browsing your site on a dial-up connection, using a screen-reader, using a mobile device with a small screen, or using a text-only browser such as Lynx. By making your website accessible you are opening it up to a much wider potential audience. Making something accessible for humans also has the side effect of making it more accessible for search engines. If you make a living through your site, happy readers, and happy search engines just make good sense.

Not convinced?

Not convinced that this is necessary? Turn off the images in your browser, and then the stylesheet, and see if you can still successfully navigate your website and get meaning from your content. What you see now is roughly how someone with visual impairment, or a text-only browser, views your website.

  • Internet Explorer: Tools > Internet Options > Advanced > Multimedia > Show pictures (uncheck)
  • Firefox: Tools > Options > Web features > Load images (uncheck)
  • Opera: Tools > Preferences > Multimedia > Show no images
  • Stylesheets: View > Page Styles > No style

So how do I go about making my links accessible?

It really isn’t that hard. If you’re already manually coding your links, making them accessible is just a case of putting in a few extra bits of text.
This how-to is in three parts, and will walk you through what you need to know:

  1. How to code an accessible hyperlink
  2. How to code an accessible image
  3. How to code an accessible embedded hyperlink

Throughout this article I will be using http://www.foo.com as an demonstration. Simply replace this, and any other exemplar text with the particulars for what you are doing.

How to code an accessible text hyperlink

Basic code

Just to remind you what the basic hyperlink code looks like:
<a href=”http://www.foo.com”>Descriptive Link Anchor Text </a>

The TITLE description – how it works

It is the TITLE attribute that makes a link accessible. It is inserted after the URL but before the first closing angled bracket and contains descriptive text, enabling the reader to ‘preview’ the link. This in turn allows users to more accurately guess where the link will take them, and make a more informed decision about whether or not they should follow it. Roll your mouse over this example link and you will see what I mean. The text that appears by your mouse cursor is the preview.
Example link

Accessible code

<a href=”http://www.foo.com” title=”Descriptive text” >
Link anchor text will render like this: Link anchor text

When to use

Every hyperlink should have a TITLE attribute.

A few notes

The descriptive title can be any text you want, though to make it as accessible as possible, follow these simple rules:

  • It should say something about the destination of the link.
  • It needs to be between 3 and 80 characters long. A single sentence is normally sufficient.

–Cas and Liz

The Complete Series
How to Code Accessible Links
This one: How to Code Accessible Links–Part 1
How to Code Accessible Links–Part 2
How to Code Accessible Links–Part 3

Filed Under: Audience, Links, SEO, Successful Blog, Tech/Stats Tagged With: accessibility, bc, blog-promotion, colding-links, personal-branding

Bloggy Book Title Discussion 7

January 15, 2006 by Liz

For those who come looking for a short, thoughtful read, a blogging life discussion, or a way to gradually ease back into the week, tonight I offer a Blogging Question.

This one’s for fun.

Here you go. . . .

Old MS Book

Last week I was emailing with Anthony Dever and I told him that I had been struck with a great title for a blogging book.

American Edition:
If You Think MY Blog Is a Personal Diary, I think your swimsuit came from Gym Class.

World Edition:
If You Think MY Blog Is a Personal Diary, I think your wine comes in a box.

What would your blogging book title be?

–ME “Liz” Strauss

Filed Under: Bloggy Questions, Business Life, Community, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, blog_book_titles, blog_discussions, ZZZ-FUN

A Blog Is Born

January 14, 2006 by Liz

Indie and I were talking about whether a sub-domain name gets in the way of Search Engine Rankings–the whole “Google doesn’t like sub-domains” idea. The question was whether that is true if your blog holds court with quality content in a specialty niche. Indie’s comments and his recent blog start-up put forth a compelling argument. We agreed he should share his experience with the community. My hope is that he’ll check in every now and then and let us know how this New Year’s Tucholdky Blog of 2006 is doing. –ME “Liz” Strauss

A Blog Is Born
by Indeterminacy

I have just started a new blog and Liz thought the readers of Successful-Blog might benefit from some of my experiences. So with my own feeling of how to do things, and some of the ideas picked up from Liz, I set out . . .

The Blog’s Purpose

The purpose of the new blog is to present the works of Kurt Tucholsky, a brilliant German journalist, satirist, poet who died in 1935. He was one of the few persons who saw clearly what was going on in German during the 1920’s and gave prescient warnings against him. His works today are just as relevant as they always were, so it seems a good idea to translate them for an English audience. I am also collaborating with the poet David Raphael Israel, who will take my literal translations into formal lyric– that’s quite frankly a task that’s beyond me. We developed a short and specific description, which is the first thing visitors will see:

Title: Kurt Tucholsky

Description: Contains a selection of the works of satirist Kurt Tucholsky (1890–1935), translated into English from the German by Indeterminacy. These translations (along with an impression of the originals) then form the basis for poet David Raphael Israel’s formal verse renderings. All translations copyright 2006.

Domain:

The first step was selecting a domain. I wanted to do the blog in Blogspot, because I’m used to Blogspot and that’s where my other blogs are, plus I believe (whether rightly or wrongly) that this will give a slight advantage in search indexing, at least in Google searches. I checked for the domain http://tucholsky.blogspot.com/, but it was blocked by a blog that never took off. Then I tried reserving http://kurttucholsky.blogspot.com/. That was available. The domain name of course has 100% relevance to the content, so I think it’s the perfect name for the site.

Setting up the Blog:

I selected one of the default template designs, actually the same I’m using at The Synchronicity of Indeterminacy but without all the links and add-ons. I think it’s essential to have some kind of statistic program–to see who visits, and which site referred users. Sometimes that’s the only way to tell if someone has linked to you. I added a minimum of relevant links: The Kurt Tucholsky Society, the German language Tucholsky blog, and the Wikipedia entry on Tucholsky.

After the first two posts I wrote to the Kurt Tucholsky Society in Germany about the project. A member of their board of directors was gracious enough to give his blessing in a lengthy post mentioning the project. I went in and added a blog introduction to lay down the purpose of the blog, and to give some background about why I wanted to do this. The blog is actually a spontaneous spin-off of a post I made at indeterminacy.

Next I added a link section to online collections of Tucholsky texts in the original German and a further link section to be maintained over time containing a chronological list of relevant posts about Tucholsky at other blogs (regardless of language). I also visited a few German language blogs that had posted one of the poems. David has written to poetry forums and friends to gather feedback for the project.

The bloggers at the blogs I visited responded enthusiastically about the project, not because they want to read Tucholsky in English, but because Tucholsky’s works are relatively unknown in that language. His works have been translated, of course, but these translations are out-of-print. So the blog fills a niche by making Tucholsky’s works accessible to a new audience. I intend to add a section of links to Bibliofind.com for each English language edition from which people can call up a list of used books.

The First 100 Hits:

The blog was created on January 4th. Ten days have gone by. Three posts and an introduction. Some of the visitors were of course random referrals from Google. What fascinated me is that some of the visitors at this early stage actually came in via search engine referral. Not many, but still interesting:

A Blog Is Born Stats

I repeated the searches myself and was surprised to see the blog showing up in the top ten already. My assumption is that the blog has two things going for it:

      1) The domain name contains the same terms that would be used to search for the blog content, and
      2) I had a look at the site Google Rankings to find out how high the rankings were for several terms.

This is what I found for the various searches:

Kurt Tucholsky
Google: 14
Yahoo: 20
MSN: 1

Tucholsky
Google: 17
Yahoo: 24
MSN: 1

Tucholsky works
Google: 2
Yahoo: 3
MSN: 1

Tucholsky blog
Google: 4
Yahoo: 12
MSN: 1

Tucholsky English*
Yahoo: 1
MSN: 3
Google: –
*I’ve since added English to the blog description.

I invite comments on what this means, how the search ranks could be so high so early.

Plans:

The plan is to just keep blogging. I will do a minimum of promotion, as I think the blog will promote itself. One of the visitors who found the blog via Google already has posted a short entry to his blog about the project. I hope it will grow into an essential reference for anyone wanting to read specific texts of Tucholsky in English. Of course it has a long way to go before reaching anywhere near comprehensiveness. The aaddtional link section that I intend to include in which each of the out-of-print translations of Tucholsky may be automatically searched in Bibliofind.com. This will help interested visitors further on their way to discovering Tucholsky in depth.

The End, that is, The Beginning

Filed Under: Blog Basics, SEO, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc

Thanks to Week 12 SOBs

January 14, 2006 by Liz

muddy teal strip A

Successful and Outstanding Bloggers

Let me introduce the bloggers
who have earned this official badge of achievement,

Purple SOB Button Original SOB Button Red SOB Button Purple and Blue SOB Button
and the right to call themselves
Successful Blog SOBs.

muddy teal strip A

mojoshivers logo

guxq logo

jamdo logo

reignofellen logo

scrapbookmarketing logo

indeterminacy logo

They take the conversation to their readers,
contribute great ideas, challenge us, make us better, and make our businesses stronger.

I thank all of our SOBs for thinking what we say is worth passing on.
Good conversation shared can only improve the blogging community.

Should anyone question this badge’s validity, send him or her directly to me. This award comes with a full “Liz said so” guarantee. It is endorsed by Kings of the Hemispheres, Martin and Michael, and backed by my brothers, Angelo and Pasquale.

deep purple strip

Want to become an SOB?

If you’re an SO-Wanna-B, you can see the whole list of SOBs and learn how to be one by visiting the SOB Hall of Fame. Click the link or visit the What IS an SOB?! page in the sidebar.

–ME “Liz” Strauss

Filed Under: SOB Business, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, blog_promotion, dialogue, relationships, SOB, SOB_Directory, successful_and_outstanding-bloggers

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