Archive | March, 2005

Redesign for 2005 With Apologies to CSSReboot

31 Mar

OK, so I’m really impatient. I signed up for the CSSReboot and here I am launching very, very early. Sorry Adam.

Anyway, some notes from the design process as well as my aims for this design.

Continuing the theme of strong warm colours (the previous design was pink for those that never saw it), I decided to go for a very warm deep red with this colour scheme. My job requires me to design very pared-down sites so I like to be a tad exuberant with my personal designs.

Again I have to ensure in all commercial designs I do that the site is totally cross browser compatible (cough IE cough) so thats what I do. However, I’m getting so fed up with dropping in hacks to cater for some browsers (cough IE cough) that I’m growing increasingly uncaring about how my personal sites look in browsers that can’t adhere to standards. Hence I’ve made an effort to ensure the site works for web standards and then put in generic hacks for IE. I suspect the design might jitter slightly in IE5.* for both Win/Mac and I have no idea how it looks in Camino at all. I took at screenie from iCapture for Safari and it looks OK. Not spot on but workable.

This design sees a major semantic overhaul. I’m finally reasonably happy with the underlying code of the site and think I’m now in a situation where a redesign means a CSS overhaul only. Its also the first time I’ve structured my CSS files in such a rigid way (including using conditional statements for IE based CSS) and I think its definitely paid dividends for me in terms of time and cleanliness of code.

My DTD says I’m going for XHTML 1.0 Strict and baring one design element the design meets that criteria. The one area it fails on is the Search suggest tool (type into the search box above you to see what this does). It breaks mainly because for the Javascript hooks to work the form requires a name attribute as well as an id. I’m in two minds as to whether to keep this feature or not. If it gets used a lot I’ll keep it. If it doesn’t I’ll drop it. I’m trying to be more accomodating of users with perceptual/cognitive disabilities and this seemed a very helpful and intuitive addition to my site search options. We’ll see I guess.

As well as the Search Suggest tool, I’ve also added a menu switcher to differentiate between internal and external links.

As regards accessibility, the design mets current Priority One (A) checkpoints. It would meet AAA if it werent for the requirement for liquid layouts in Priority 2 (AA). However, as I’ve said in the past, the current WCAG standard is not great at meeting the needs of uses with a learning or perceptual disability and hence I’ve made my design work for a cross section of users rather than for an increasingly archaic accessibility standard. Here’s hoping WCAG 2.0 is better.

I’ve used the UK Governments accesskey convention for all accesskeys on this site.

I toyed with the idea of content negotiation for quite some time but in the end reluctantly decided to not implement it. Using it means I need 100% accurate code and in a site that allows markup in comments I can’t be sure that will always be possible so for now, I’ll stick reluctantly to tag soup.

Lenny Schafer Part II: A Masterclass In Misinformation

29 Mar

You have to hand it to Mr Schafer. As a dealer in misinformation and alarmist tactics he’s second to none. Oh sure, he occassionaly lapses into a more open view of what he really thinks of people with autism:

those who would define Aspergers or autism as little more than an odd-ball minority lifestyle made up of ‘geeks’ and savants with ticks doing tricks……the very real, if not romantic ‘culture of autism’ in which anyone who taps a pencil can opt themselves in as a member.

But most of the time he’s actually very good at how he spins his misinformation. If Alistair Campbell or Karl Rove ever need a stand in, I’d be happy to write Mr Schafer a glowing recommendation. Here’s part of a response he wrote to a woman asking for his ideas on who has the final say on how autism as a spectrum disorder is classified:

There are eight established Asperger’s care and advocacy groups on the east coast with good community reputations who refer to themselves as autism organizations, despite clinical Asperger’s being different from clinical autism. Why would such groups seem to go out of their way to confuse the public so? By referring to Asperger’s as autism, it helps paint Asperger’s as a serious disorder, which is understandable. But it also trivializes autism, making it appear to be less serious than it is. Those self-described autistic people who demand that autism not be cured or treated highlight the threat this blurring presents to people who really have autism.

Wow! Now, concentrate hard here because there’s so much spin and misinformation going on here that its easy to miss the true genius of Mr Schafers abilities in misinformation. Lets take them one by one.

First, the biggie – “despite clinical Asperger’s being different from clinical autism”. Lets just stand back and admire that for awhile. Until recently, Mr Schafer hasn’t used the word ‘clinical’ in his reports at all. His line has been that Aspergers is not autism – end of story. Obviously the constant chip chip chipping away from autistic advocacy groups has rendered Mr Schafer more ammenable to using more appropriate language. However, through the clever use of this phrase he makes it appear that he’s maintaining the exact same position – well done Sir!

Unfortunately there are serious flaws with even this statement. First of all, Mr Schafer is not to the best of my knowledge, a diagnostician except of the armchair variety and hence any interpretation of diagnostic criteria on his part should be viewed with at best, healthy scepticism. Secondly and more substantively, a lot of properly accredited and qualified autism researchers and clinicians are very unhappy with the recent change in the diagnostic criteria that leads Mr Schafer to be able to make his statement at all.

The diagnostic criteria in the DSM, which provide a differentiation between autism and Asperger’s syndrome, have been examined by several research studies over the last five years. There has been some criticism from clinicians and research that the criteria do not identify the disorder Hans Asperger originally described. The four cases he described in his original paper would be diagnosed, according to DSM criteria, as having autism not Asperger’s syndrome. (Miller and Ozonoff 1997). If one was to use the DSM criteria, Asperger’s syndrome would be a very rare condition.

Dr Tony Attwood

Which is to say, that yes, Mr Schafer is correct, there is a difference between clinical autism and clinical Aspergers but that it only exists through the reclassification of Aspergers into something that was not described by the man who first classified Aspergers Syndrome. A disengenuous solution ingeniously expoited by the ever-ready Mr Schafer. After all, as he himself says:

Some experts have problems with these definitions, and who is to say they’re wrong. It’s just the only standard out there for defining the labels. The fuzzier the labels are, the more room there is for mischief.

You cheeky scamp Mr Schafer! Next you’ll be telling us that Aspergers and autism don’t fall under the exact same set of Pervasive Development Disorders or Autisitc (note that word!) Spectrum Disorders however I suspect that seeing as, at bottom, both Kanners autism and Aspergers syndrome actually do depend on the same set of basic differences you’ll be scuppered. Bad luck.

Next up is Mr Schafers statement that:

By referring to Asperger’s as autism, it helps paint Asperger’s as a serious disorder, which is understandable. But it also trivializes autism, making it appear to be less serious than it is…

Mr Schafer cleverly omits telling us who exactly would be ‘trivialised’ by this painting of Aspergers as a serious disorder. Mainly as one suspects not many people would be. The truth, as experienced by numerous people on both flavours of the spectrum, is that both are pretty serious. It does make one wonder why Mr Schafer is quite so determined to seperate Aspergers and autism, despite medical data stretching back decades that quite baldly and repeatedly states they are linked. I personally have to come to the conclusion that he is growing ever more concerned at the growing amount of people within the actual autistic movement (i.e. autistics and their parents) who challenge his misinformation and spin in growing numbers and with growing confidence to share the truth – if he can seperate the two then he can dismiss the Aspergers autistics as irrelvant to his push for a cure. It must be deeply irritating that there simply is no evidence to support his position of seperation.

Next, Mr Schafer goes over his position once more:

Those self-described autistic people who demand that autism not be cured or treated highlight the threat this blurring presents to people who really have autism.

Ahh, a masterstroke: using the traditional scare tactic and doubling the scare factor by making it an unfounded, unsubstantiated and medically incorrect statement! Truly in the annals of spin and misdirection Mr Schafer is a magician. ‘Self-described’ people indeed – genius! Or it would be if these autistics actually were ‘self-described’. Unfortunately the evidence is, at best, out on this issue and very very likely to indicate the exact opposite. Far from being ‘self-described’ these people are actually merely circumspect with their private medical data. Ironically, the only person who seems to make a habit of off-the-cuff diagnosis is (drum roll…) Mr Schafer. In fact, he’s so good he can even make off-the-cuff diagnosis of people over the internet! Surely I can’t be the only one simply amazed that diagnosticians are not clamouring at Mr Schafers door to learn the secrets of his (no doubt patented) Automatic Autism Judger.

Sadly Mr Schafer’s spin cannot stand up to the rigorous process of ‘checking for oneself’. Upon undertaking this process one discovers that (gasp!) no autistics claim to not want any treatment (or at least the ones I’ve spoken to anyway). They do ask that society treats them with enough respect that they are not labelled as part of a ‘disease’ or ‘ticks with tricks’ or ‘an odd-ball minority lifestyle made up of ‘geeks’ and savants’ or that they can reach a position where people respect them for their difference instead of trying to cure the incurable. But treatment? Oh yes, autistics ask for that. They are fully aware of when they need help and under what circumstances our role as supportive parents can make life easier.

Mr Schafer is also a staunch opponent of the opinion that the rise in autism rates can be attributed to better detection and diagnostic criteria. He says:

It was the new criteria for autism defined in the DSM IV that was the impetuous for the charges of the autism epidemic being
an illusory artifact of different diagnosing. In other words, this argues that there has always been an autism rate of 1 to 166 and only now because of the new definitions it appears to be a big increase. This is ridiculous because it would mean that there are still hidden hoards of autistic people from before the new definitions still walking around un-or-misdiagnosed.

You have to admire the tone, the authority it all sounds so commanding doesn’t it? It almost sounds like he knows what he’s talking about. Almost. Mr Schafers view that its ‘ridiculous’ to assign the autism ‘epidemic’ to better diagnostics is addressed by medical experts – people who actually do know what they’re talking about and who are also experts in the field of early detection of ASD:

However, the signs of Asperger’s syndrome in very young children may be more subtle and easily camouflaged at home and school. On reflection, parents (especially mothers) and teachers have often been concerned about some aspects of the child’s cognitive development, in particular their social reasoning, but their concerns may have been intuitive, and difficult to describe to clinicians. It is not until the child is expected to show more advanced cognitive abilities that formal assessments indicate significant
delay

Dr Tony Attwood

So, when Mr Schafer, a non-entity in the field of medical diagnosis, calls the idea of ‘hidden hordes’ of people walking around ‘ridiculous’, a world renowned expert on ASD and diagnostic criteria says that its not only very likely its actually a feature of the very type of autism Mr Schafer is so intent on denying. Not irony exactly but still a bit pithy.

So whilst we have to admire Mr Schafers increasing attempts at spinning the data we have to deduct marks for the ease of refutation.

This post does have a serious point. Mr Schafer has made his position clear. He will do anything to further his aims. This includes deliberate attempts to mould the facts to meet his version of the truth and misrepresenting an entire group of people. Speaking as the parent of an autistic child diagnosed with severe classic Kanners autism I say for the record that I neither trust him nor appreciate his attempts at wilful misleading of parents. If he had any decency he’d at least retract or admit to the inaccuracies in his beliefs. I doubt he will though and more parents will join the queue to rid the world of their children.

All quotes from Mr Schafer found on Yahoo Groups.

Project: New Update

25 Mar

Had a lot of emails since the last publication requesting that an RSS feed be created for Project: New. I was expecting a bit of a tricky scenario but to be honest, its fairly easy to do.

First we need to set the correct MIME type – XML and include the XML Prolog – this is to stop browsers sending the content as text/html:

Next we hard code some info about the site and subject the RSS feed is about:

After this comes the trickiest part of the whole thing – and it really isn’t tricky at all. We simply perform a query on the table that holds the data and loop through it, outputting the right field data into the right RSS tags:

And to finish off, we hard code our closing RSS tags:

Here’s the whole thing for your copying and pasting pleasure:

Structuring Your Client Drive

23 Mar

Wherever I’ve worked in the past, there’s always been ‘issues’ about structuring client data to make it easy for the Design team to get at and share. An example: Back in the 90’s, I worked for an agency where one of my colleagues method of storing client data was to save everything to his desktop then, when his desktop was covered in icons, save the contents of the desktop in a directory called ‘desktop’ which he’d then keep on his (you guessed it) desktop! When he was away it was a fucking nightmare trying to find stuff if an old client called up.

The rest of us therefore took it upon ourselves to formulate a client drive directory structure which we’d adhere to for every client. Its proved so easy to implement and use I’ve suggested its implementation at every place I’ve worked at since and I thought I’d share it with you and maybe get your suggestions on ways to tweak it or better it.

First of all is to get a private share setup to lock off the rest of the company – you don’t want Chardonnay from HR stumbling into your carefully organised structure and dropping files off left right and centre. Obviously, if you’re implementing this as a freelancer then you’re pretty much safe.

The first level of directories should be the names of your clients. Simply that, nothing else.

Within each client directory you create a new directory for every seperate project you’ve done/are doing/are about to start for that client.

So far, so pretty obvious I suspect. I’d be surprised if most designers didn’t do this. However, the next stage is where the difference lies. A lot of design teams and freelance designers I’ve worked with in the past simply chuck everything to do with that project in the project directory and hence are making life more tricky than it needs to be.

My next level is comprised of four directories; first is the Production directory. In fact, most of the time this isn’t even a directory its actually a shortcut to a corresponding directory on my local web server. As its a production directory, this is obviously where all files that make up the resultant website live.

Next up is a directory called Documentation. In this directory I have a number of sub-directories:

  1. Content. This is where I place all the textual content that pertains to the project. I also keep a very simple spreadsheet file that I use to track versions of the same file. I would recommend making the date and a number part of the file name e.g. homepagecontent_23_3_05_v1.doc and then if the client sent an update to the content for that section I would create another file like so: homepagecontent_28_3_05_v2.doc
  2. Technical. In this directory I keep all the details of the technical info I may need for this project such as FTP details, database connection string usernames, passwords etc. I also keep wireframes, workflows and any usability reports in this directory, possibly in sub-directories of their own.
  3. Correspondance. This is where I keep all formal correspondance such as job spec, the completed brief, client sign-off sheets, invoices, colour specs, font specs etc

Next up is the Source directory. In this directory I create a sub-directory that corresponds to every single source filetype created during the course of the project. So typical sub-directories may be: PSD, EPS, FLA. NB: No outputted flat files must be in here. If they’re outputted files they should be somewhere else, probably the Production directory. Really, the sub-directories in this directory are completley dependant on the project you’re working on e.g. you won’t need a FLA directory if you’re not going to use Flash. The only constant for this directory is the Concepts directory where you store the source files that are used to create the design concepts.

Lastly is the Imagery directory. In this directory there are three sub-directories:

  1. Stock. In here (obviously) I put all the stock imagery I get whether it comes from the client or whether I’ve sourced it myself. I also maintain a file naming system for my files in this directory e.g. sxc_800_600_72_100891234.jpg which to me indicates that the file came from stock.xchng that its dimensions are 800×600 and its resolution is 72. The long string of numbers is simply the filename as it was on the site I got it from. I also maintain a simple spreadsheet that lists the exact URI of the file on the originating stock site (if applicable).
  2. Flat_logo. I keep all the flattened versions of any logos associated with the projcet in this directory, whether this is a logo I helped with or whether it comes from an external source.
  3. Flat_concepts. Similar to the above except these are flattened versions of any design concepts associated with the project. I also insist on a good file naming structure for this directory e.g. aboutus_kl_v1.png which lists the name of the section the design concept relates to, the initials of the designer and the version of this concept.

This structure meets my needs very well and always has. I’d be very interested in hearing your thoughts, how you do things, what improvements you would make etc. And of course I’m well aware I’ve either told you what you already know, or helped you or simply revealed myself as an obsessive control freak.

Here’s a link to an example directory structure based on this document.

Its A Spring Day, And A Young Girls Thoughts Turn To

19 Mar

Meggy trampolining

Trampolining! Or at least they do if its Megan! We’d long heard about the positive calming effect of bouncing that some autistics reported so last year we bought a bloody great trampoline, replete with safety cage and she loved it. Today is the first day she can use it since last year as the weather has suddenly broken into Spring one week early.

Increase In Autism Caused by Modern Breeding Habits?

14 Mar

Supposedly, as the parent of a autistic child I should fall to my knees and sob uncontrollably when I consider the ‘personal tradgedy’ of how ‘the disease’ of autism has ‘blighted’ my life. Excuse me if I don’t won’t you? This generation has more than its fair share of ‘pity-poor-me’s’ a lot of whom reside in the parental movement to cure autism. A movement driven by the greed of snake oil salesmen and fed on the ignorance of parents looking for a way out of what society tells them is a terrible plight.

These movements usually centre around what caused their childs autism and how they can fix it. In the eyes of society who tells them autism is ‘an epidemic’ they don’t see their child, they see the difference and they only see it negatively. The two main targets of parental ire these days are vaccines and mercury, mostly linked together.

Time to be honest : I don’t know that vaccines are definitely safe. I do however think that the evidence is conclusive against vaccines causing autism. Of course, these modern day crusaders in the cure camp aren’t interested in evidence. Without vaccines, without Mercury they have no enemy to rail against, no foe to overcome – except their own children of course. Personally I don’t believe that anything other than single vaccines are safe myself. Triple jabs are, in my opinion, too much for some kids. I think the DTP jab may have triggered Megans autism. Note that ‘trigger’ is not the same as ’caused’. We believe Megans potential for autism was always there. I believe the same is true for any autistic child.

And so, it was with interest I read a piece in The Spectator by Rod Liddle that explains his belief that the increase in autism may be a partial result of modern breeding habits. Its a fascinating theory and apparently one which Simon Baron-Cohen is actively pursuing:

I believe that the cause of autism will turn out to be assortative mating of two hyper-systemisers…(strands of research have not yet proved the case of assortative mating theory, but)…they simply point to it being highly likely. I will give up the idea if it is proven wrong …but I won’t give up the idea simply because it will be unpopular to certain groups, such as those who want to believe that the cause of autism is purely environmental.

Basically, Baron-Cohen is saying that people with a propensity for autism are producing autistic children. Sounds obvious but if it turns out to be true then its the death knell for the cure groups and their constant clamouring against environmental agents being the sole cause.

Liddle then goes on to propound his own, admittedly unscientific theory, to account for why the factors Baron-Cohen is investigating may lead directly to the so called autism ‘epidemic’.

If we are marrying and having our children later, and men are much, much more likely to be working alongside women, because of a greater degree of equality within the job market and a decline of those jobs traditionally associated with women, is it not possible that these days our partners would tend to be drawn from the sphere of work rather than, as before, in a rather more random fashion from within our home communities? In other words, are we not more likely to be marrying partners who, through their choice of field of work, are similar to us? And if that is the case, might this rather crude definition of assortative mating be contributing to the rise in cases of children with one or another autism spectrum disorder?

I don’t know but its an intriguing idea. It would certainly have some darkly comic value for the cure camp to learn once and for all that its their genetic inheritance coupled with their mating habits that have ’caused’ the ‘epidemic’ that they so regularly beat their breasts about.

Project: New Issue 2 Live!

14 Mar

As per the title – issue 2 of Project: New is now live. Head over and have a read at your leisure.

Parents: The Truth About Autism

11 Mar

Another day and another ‘cure’ group springs up. This one is called Generation Rescue and centres its efforts around the removal of Mercury.

EDIT: This edit is in place for all the people coming over from the Evidence of Harm mail list.

I become aware of your groups existence after checking my referral logs and finding a reference to this blog entry on the EoH mail list. On that group I was referred to as an ‘idiot’ and ‘stupid’ and characterised as a bad parent because of my belief that Generation Rescue were wrong to state that autism was mercury poisoning.

I was very annoyed by the misrepresentation of my beliefs and responded in kind. In hindsight it would’ve been better to calm down first, then respond. Also, thanks to the 7 or 8 people from EoH list who’ve mailed me privately to express their suspicions that I’m right or who’ve been willing to conduct the debate on a more sensible, adult level. Anyone and everyone is free to post here but if anyone gets openly abusive then an abuse mail will be sent to your ISP and your IP will be banned from here.

They claim that its the Mercury in our everyday lives that has caused autism and that its removal from the body will cure autism.

They have a big section on facts and claim support from thousands of parents/doctors etc etc. It goes without saying of course that all the Doctors who suppoprt tham are, according to them ‘world renowned’ or ‘experts in their field’.

However, they are wrong. If they were right then there would be no genetic evidence that autism exists. This is not to say that they are wrong about how bad Mercury is as they are not. Its also not to say that some autistics may be suffering from Mercury poisoning, as they may well be. What they fail to say though is that its possible to suffer Mercury poisoning and not be autistic. They fail to explain the concept of comorbidity and what it means for their argument.

Some autistic people have comorbid conditions such as ADHD, Tourettes etc. If an autistic person is proven to be suffering from Mercury poisoning and subsequently treated, they have been successfuly treated and cured of their poisoning – not their autism.

A telling point in the argument used by these kind of groups is the convoluted phrases used such as:

When you know cause, you can focus on cure.Thousands of parents are curing their children by removing the mercury from their children’s bodies. We want you, the parent, to know the truth.

Note how they carefully omit what they’re curing. The truth is, the fact is that they are not curing autism – it is incurable as it is not a disease – what they are curing is Mercury poisoning. A good thing of course, but very misleadingly described.

However, where groups like this get very dangerous is when they make claims such as:

There is no evidence to suggest that autism is genetic. No autism gene has ever been found and the search will be endless – how can you have a gene for a mythical condition? Autism is mercury poisoning.

Firstly, they are incorrect to infer no genetic basis for autism, there are freely available stories that establish genetic evidence for autism all over the internet. The one linked to above is just one single report. Feel free to search Google or Yahoo for hundreds of other reports. Claims like this do the actual autism movement a grave disservice in their irresponsible dissemination of misinformation. Secondly they claim baldly that autism is mercury poisoning with no evidence whatsoever to back up that claim. Let me be clear: there may be evidence that some autistics have mercury poisoning and these people may respond very well to the subsequent treatment, but this treatment is not a cure for autism. Mercury poisoning, at best, is a comorbid condition of some autistics.

It worries me so much that this kind of spin-doctoring of the facts goes on. Not only is entirely disrespectful to allude to a whole subsection of society as the result of an epidemic, or to be a disease, or to need a cure it also puts false hope into those parents who are desperately trying to help their children. Not help them to be ‘cured’ but help them to find a place in society being proud of who and what they are. Can you imagine how it must feel to be constantly told that your existence is nothing more than a disease?

Autistics do not need, nor will there ever be, a cure. What they need from us is our respect and our help. By all means intervene in your childrens lives to find a way to alleviate their debilitating comorbid conditions but if you’re after a cure you need to know that there is none and that by doing so you are giving your child the message that who they are is wrong.

Cognitive/Perceptual Difference And Good Web Design

8 Mar

Before Xmas, I wrote a post about how autistics use interfaces. I noted in that article that the things I had seen so far couldn’t be representative as they were only what I haad observed in my daughter Megan.

To that end I have recently been chatting online to a couple of groups of people who are autistic in order to try and get a sense of how we as web designers could better meet their needs and to develop a rounder picture of the nature of the interface related problems an autistic may face.

Firstly some definitions. The people I have most recently spoken to are mainly Aspergers (please note: they do not have Aspergers – ‘having’ implies illness/disease neither of which Aspergers is), whilst some (and my daughter) are classically autistic. There are differences in these two states of being but the basic underlying issues are the same – they are both Autistic Spectrum Disorders which are rooted in the same set of root difference.

During our discussions, the main issues raised were:

  1. Short Line length
  2. Colour combinations (light on dark is very bad)
  3. Imagery/Animation
  4. White space (rivers of white)
  5. Small text blocks
  6. Backgrounds must be solid, not patterned
  7. Single, long pages broken into small sections rather than lots of individual pages

You have to be careful in these circumstances to differentiate between personal preference and a genuine trait for all people who follow a certain diagnostic criteria. The above list is comprised of things that were mentioned by more than 2 different people.

First of all is my piece of humble pie – imagery and animation. Autistic people have no great preference for graphical interfaces with a few indicating a definite preference for textual interfaces and the majority indicating they are happy with either. At this time then I’d say that my observations of my daughter and subsequent conclusions are more relevant to her age rather than her autism – kids like pictures and animation.

Colour combinations for autistics can be tricky. Autism is heavily based around sensory difference and hence some autistics actually ‘hear’ colour (or smell sounds etc etc) and hence some colour combinations can in some circumstances be actually physically painful to some autistics. Unfortunately there doesn’t seem to be any one colour combination that is espcially bad (or good) as, like all of us, autistics have personal preferences regarding colours. I do think though that more research in this area may reveal an autisitc ‘swatch’. This would require a more structured program of investigation though.

Autistics by and large follow NT (neurotypical) preferences in the area of line length, hence the following would be applicable to autistics as well:

Both children and adults had definite preferences. No adults chose the full length as their favorite. Most chose medium length, and narrow length was not far behind. For the children the full length was also the least preferred, with a strong preference for the narrow length.

http://www.humanfactors.com/downloads/feb03.asp

Autstics indicated a definite preference for strong, wide margins preferably in white to any areas where there was textual content and textual content on one subject should be on one (long if neccessary) page broken into small paragrpahs rather than long unbroken blocks of text spread across many pages.

Backgrounds should be solid – even a slight pattern in a background causes the page to ‘swim’ badly – remember, autism is primarily a perceptual and emotional disorder.

One of the most interesting aspects of my discussions with autistic people is their opinions on branding. Simply, they all acknowledge its there but make no emotional link with it at all. In a lot of cases autistic users find it distracting and puzzling. Especially where (for example) a logo carries a device as well as the name of the company. Most autistics struggle with metaphor and seem to find it offputting in this setting.

So what can we do to make our autistic users browsing easier? Firstly it seems we can apply a lot of the rules of good design backed up with both WCAG (although AAA may not be possible bearing the desire for smaller line length and hence a probable fixed width) and standards compliant markup. The two areas of potential difficulty that I think need more investigation are branding and developing an autistic swatch (swatches). It should be straightfoward to provide technical solutions to these issues using CSS but firstly we need to further develop these two areas with more focussed investigation.

May 1st Reboot

4 Mar

Superb idea over at Benjamin Adam.

The May 1st reboot is usually swamped by Flash designs. Wouldn’t it be nice to have some standarsd based CSS designs in there? I thought so, so I signed up. Better get working on some concepts after the next issue of Project: New I guess!