- From: Chris Beer <chris@e-beer.net.au>
- Date: Wed, 02 Feb 2011 20:24:27 +1100
- To: John Foliot <jfoliot@stanford.edu>
- CC: 'Emmanuelle Gutiérrez y Restrepo' <coordina@sidar.org>, 'Danny Ayers' <danny.ayers@gmail.com>, 'Ian Jacobs' <ij@w3.org>, 'Jonathan Chetwynd' <j.chetwynd@btinternet.com>, w3c-wai-ig@w3.org, site-comments@w3.org, 'Tim Berners-Lee' <timbl@w3.org>, matt@smiffytech.com
- Message-ID: <4D4922CB.5030405@e-beer.net.au>
Thanks for the +1's. So - to make this more than an off the cuff comment - how would we make this idea work in reality. Something as simple as an "adopt this page" widget, similar to a "rate this page" that you see on many sites? How do we make it work for those without a w3 account? Something that takes you to a simple form for minor details like preferred name or the like if you aren't already logged in with a W3 account?. Then once a page is adopted, the user's name appears on there? Do we begin with a mail out to member groups and public members asking for them to nominate a page to become a Page Friend for? (Just saw Matthew's message :) ) Thoughts? Cheers C. -- /*Chris Beer* Invited Expert (Public Member) W3 eGovernment Interest Group & W3-WAI WCAG Working Group EM: chris@e-beer.net.au <mailto:chris@e-beer.net.au> TW: @zBeer <http://www.twitter.com/zBeer> LI: http://au.linkedin.com/in/zbeer/ On 2/2/2011 8:04 PM, John Foliot wrote: > > So ya’ know Ian, this idea has some legs IMHO. Surely we have more > friends than pages? I add my +1 to this too. > > *From:*w3c-wai-ig-request@w3.org [mailto:w3c-wai-ig-request@w3.org] > *On Behalf Of *Emmanuelle Gutiérrez y Restrepo > *Sent:* Tuesday, February 01, 2011 5:07 PM > *To:* chris@e-beer.net.au; 'Danny Ayers' > *Cc:* 'Ian Jacobs'; 'Jonathan Chetwynd'; w3c-wai-ig@w3.org; > site-comments@w3.org; 'Tim Berners-Lee' > *Subject:* RE: w3.org site-wide markup review? > > +1 for the “adopt a page” idea. > > Best regards, > > Emmanuelle > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > > /Emmanuelle Gutiérrez y Restrepo/ > > Directora de la Fundación Sidar > > Coordinadora del Seminario SIDAR > > www.sidar.org > > email: coordina@sidar.org / emmanuelle@sidar.org > > *De:*w3c-wai-ig-request@w3.org [mailto:w3c-wai-ig-request@w3.org] *En > nombre de *Chris Beer > *Enviado el:* miércoles, 02 de febrero de 2011 0:14 > *Para:* Danny Ayers > *CC:* Ian Jacobs; Jonathan Chetwynd; w3c-wai-ig@w3.org; > site-comments@w3.org; Tim Berners-Lee > *Asunto:* Re: w3.org site-wide markup review? > > All > > Why not start an "adopt a page" concept - members orgs and regular > users could adopt a page or a number of pages and check validity and > currency. Source code changes could simply be sent in and the page > re-uploaded with the new code. > > Just a thought. :) > > Chris > > On 2/2/2011 6:45 AM, Danny Ayers wrote: > > On 1 February 2011 18:55, Ian Jacobs<ij@w3.org> <mailto:ij@w3.org> wrote: > > > w3.org has a very large number of pages. I don't expect to fix all of them. > > I focus on the ones that are brought to my attention. We use some tools > > internally (and have used more historically, but less so now) to check for > > validity, for instance. > > > But for heaven's sake (despite Jonathan's comment), it isn't 1998! > > The fact that there are a large number of pages is exactly the reason > relying on one person at the end of an email address to fix them is a > bad idea. > > Tools do become less useful over time and fall into disuse if they're > not actively maintained. But as strategies go, doing without tools > isn't very sound. > > > I agree that a page might be broken and not reported. And tools help us > > catch some of those. > > > I bet the Amaya page wasn't the first reported with problems re. fixed > px value. Wouldn't it be a wee bit more efficient if rather than > reports like these triggering the correction of that single page, they > triggered the addition of an extra check to a tool with site-wide > coverage..? > > > For an > > organisation who's raison d'etre is to improve the Web, their Web > > presence should be as good as possible: "good enough" *isn't*. It goes > > down to credibility. > > > > I agree that we have to maintain high standards on our site. Credibility > > will be derived from a number of factors. We don't have budget for all of > > them, alas. > > > Regarding budget, prevention of problems usually costs less than > repair. A stitch in time etc, This is especially true when it comes to > credibility, which is much easier to lose than regain. Are the W3C's > offices protected by sprinklers and fire insurance or a man with a > bucket? > > I'd also love to know what factors impact credibility more than the > public (and industry) face of the organisation. What you might call > the World Wide Web aspect of the W3C. > > Cheers, > Danny. > > > > - > /<http://au.linkedin.com/in/zbeer>/
Received on Wednesday, 2 February 2011 09:25:53 UTC