- From: William Loughborough <love26@gorge.net>
- Date: Thu, 21 Oct 2004 10:49:48 -0700
- To: Al Gilman <Alfred.S.Gilman@IEEE.org>, "Pawson, David" <David.Pawson@rnib.org.uk>,<wai-xtech@w3.org>
- Message-Id: <6.1.2.0.2.20041021100014.01f9a510@pop3.gorge.net>
At 07:13 AM 10/21/2004, Al Gilman wrote: > Please post your contributions before midnight UTC Sunday 24 October. >a) a link to the page in question >b) your analysis of how this page breaks down into parts http://www.talkingsigns.com/ Screen is divided into two vertically scrollable panels. Smaller left panel is the only navigation method and links internally to a series of "articles" which when selected display in the larger right panel. Many of these are links to external URIs whose source code is tedious to reach, particulary since the address doesn't show the URI you have linked to. [For a site intended to provide access, it has, to my great personal embarrassment such things as (in the http://www.talkingsigns.com/tksinfo.shtml article) Alt text = "Click here for larger image"]. On the "main" page are several links to audio/video files. Their rather immense size accompanies their linkagenesses. This overall layout plan is found very frequently on the Web; i.e., One panel (usually on left) having hyperlinks that change the display in the other panel. http://www.w3.org/WAI/EO/ Screen has three navigation features: a logo that furnishes a sort of uplink to the mother page, an inline one with links to sections within the main page, and one in the upper right with links to other related documents. Except for the logo, it's all text. Most of my own sites are almost entirely text and resemble this one. It is also a very commonplace method. -- Love. Everyone/everything/everywhere/always connected
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Received on Thursday, 21 October 2004 17:49:46 UTC