- From: Steve Lee <steve@opendirective.com>
- Date: Wed, 28 Jan 2015 14:33:02 +0000
- To: "lisa.seeman" <lisa.seeman@zoho.com>
- Cc: Anthony Doran <t.doran@texthelp.com>, public-cognitive-a11y-tf <public-cognitive-a11y-tf@w3.org>
I quite agree, URLs are for humans, not search engines. i know many people treat google as the address bar but it still matters. Here' one of several articles ive seen on the issue http://www.webwritingthatworks.com/DGuideLink3g.htm Steve Lee OpenDirective http://opendirective.com On 28 January 2015 at 13:45, lisa.seeman <lisa.seeman@zoho.com> wrote: > Yup, good piotn > Neilson also mentions in his report about senoirs that they often type in > the url as the way to get to a site. Making the url easy to write is > definitely a help > > > All the best > > Lisa Seeman > > Athena ICT Accessibility Projects > LinkedIn, Twitter > > > > > ---- On Wed, 28 Jan 2015 14:04:22 +0200 Anthony Doran<t.doran@texthelp.com> > wrote ---- > > Hi All, > > I've had a thought (which is a dangerous thing) - it may be outside > our remit but - are there any guidelines with respect to the actual > URL form? I know there are of course technical specs/standards for > URLs/URIs but should there be some sort of guidance for accessibility? > I've been looking at SEO guidelines as a part of my day to day and > there are some great ideas in there - including keywords, not using > nonsensical URLs with strings of numbers etc. On considering the > difficulties for those with memory issues, letter transposition issues > etc etc it would make sense that any URL should really be as > "friendly" as possible. Reading a URL from a letter, or poster, or > advert or whatever should really be as easy as possible. > > I'm not just talking about URLs with GUIDs or random numbers in there > - just look at this, a site for older people to access legal services > in Scotland: > > http://www.solicitorsforolderpeoplescotland.co.uk/ > > This uses words that you can read, but look at the target audience and > the length of that URL never mind the confusing spelling. It's awful. > > Perhaps I'm venting a little at something that's already covered > somewhere else? > > Thanks, Tony > > -- > -- > Texthelp Ltd is a limited company registered in Belfast, N. Ireland with > registration number NI31186 having its registered office and principal > place of business at Lucas Exchange, 1 Orchard Way, Antrim, N. Ireland, > BT41 2RU. > > >
Received on Wednesday, 28 January 2015 14:33:30 UTC