Archive for January, 2008

23
Jan

Sitting on the Fence

Today I gave the NICS Editorial Board an update on the consultation document “Delivering Inclusive Websites” stating my support for the position and response from the PSWMG. Later I gave more thought to this as I re-read Jack Pickard’s blog entry on this very same subject.

In his entry Jack rightly raises the issue of the COI going with WCAG 1.0 as their standard. When browsers, assistive technologies and website content have all evolved dramatically since the WCAG was introduced in 1999, why are we still following these standards. Well in the absence of anything else and WCAG 2.0 taking forever, what else is there? I’d really hoped that in the last few years we’d see a website owner taken to court so that at least we could see for definite what the law’s minimum requirements would be rather than making assumptions.

I personally feel that the UK Government needs to step up to the mark here and by Government I mean civil servants. There’s a need to recognise the opportunity for not only meeting demands among developers who care but more importantly citizens who are suffering inaccessible and unusable websites.

As I’ve mentioned before in Northern Ireland we have an audit process which most, new central Government websites must go through. As a result we have a host of sites which by and large are usable and accessible, meeting at least WCAG 1.0, priority 1 checkpoints.

We have our own interpretation of the WCAG, most of which is available online but desperately requires updating. So why haven’t these been updated? Well quite simply resources and priorities. I don’t have the time to revise them and equally such an exercise is not high enough on my long list of things to do. The COI however, obviously have a lot more resources available for such work as their recent consultation document demonstrates but it did little to convince anyone that they are about to put a set of sensible, practical and robust guidelines in place.

Is this because they didn’t know what standard to aim for? Is it worth putting in weeks of work around a set of outdated standards? Or do you wait on WCAG 2.0 then go for the jugular? This is where I sit on the fence. As I mentioned above part of me thinks COI should step up to the mark and do it now. I would be confident that COI with the assistance of the PSWMG could put together a killer document, a reference guide that would even make the old fogeys responsible for WCAG 2.0 sit up and take notice. But would they be leaving themselves open to criticism and perhaps legal action in European courts if WCAG 2.0 is seen as an international legal standard.

All this uncertainty makes life all the more difficult if not demoralising for the developer in the street who just wants to do a good job and ensure the sites he builds don’t present barriers to users.

Constantly I’m asked about a range of issues to which I struggle to find a definitive answer for, should sites be fixed or fluid, is it ok to use PDFs, are images for text ok? For me the only real way we’ll ever be able to make a more definitive call is if substantial, concentrated user testing is carried out, on a wide range of people, with different platforms, ATs, environments etc. I find it hard to believe that no one has undertaken such a task but have yet to find results of any such level of testing.

Surely this is something central Government would welcome and fund? If not, are there other routes, for example charities? I for one am tired of sitting on the fence, I think it’s time we started lobbying for positive action.

23
Jan

Le Zapper

The Wii Zapper was released in early December and I, probably like many others, thought I’d buy myself one in my local Tescos or Asda. However, as it turns out the Zapper has been one of the most sought after Wii accessories, fetching silly prices on Ebay. Not willing to pay £40 for something which retails at £19.99 I’ve been surfing sites such as Game, Argos, Toys R Us etc for weeks – but they’re all out of stock!

A couple of weeks ago I seen a post on my current favourite site www.hotdealsuk.co.uk which stated that Amazon France had the Wii Zapper in stock. Despite taking annual holidays in France I’m still somewhat rusty with the lingo but I proceeded and successfully ordered a Zapper. However, it’s still not arrived, 5 days after the estimated arrival date so I sent an email through the site to check if it definitely had been dispatched. At the time I thought it’ll take a few days to get a reply, it’ll probably be in French and I’ll have to use Babelfish BUT… much to my surprise 5mins later, yes 5mins later I get a reply, in English, saying it had been dispatched and to wait 2 more days before coming back to them. Now that’s what I call excellent customer service, Vive La France!

02
Jan

Wii FIFA

Three months ago I bought FIFA08 for my Wii having had previous versions for the PC, my Gameboy Advance, N64 and SNES.

After two half hour stints I thought what a waste of money, I could barely string two passes together and there seemed to be so many movements required to control players that I was left dazed and confused. However Christmas came and I decided I was going to spend some time on FIFA08 to try and master it. Master it I didn’t but now I’m certainly a hell of a lot better at it!

For those of you out there who have loved the FIFA games over the years FIFA on the Wii is a completely different experience. Forgetting the crappy family play option, where the computer basically does it all for you, it’s a fairly steep learning curve to master passing and shooting, never mind the trick moves.

Passing

Short passes are easy and the through ball is your best friend but playing lobbed passes or decent crosses is a skill on its own! I’ve played many games now and scored a load of goals but I think my cross to goal tally amounts to one. Either the keeper gets the ball everytime or it falls to a defender, grrrrrrr.

Shooting

Scoring goals is the second hardest part of FIFA. I played 6/7 games totally dominating but unable to score but once I did the floodgates opened. Flicking the remote up and down is the typical method of scoring but I accidentally found an even better method which seems to hit a low, hard, swerved shot which is done by flicking the remote down and at an angle to your left or right depending on what swerve you want. I didn’t see this in any of the training exercises, did I miss something? My best goal to date has been courtesy of Ronaldo with a 20 yard free kick which curled over the wall and burst into the top left corner. I only wish I could have saved it and put it on YouTube!

Speed

Even though I was starting to win a few games I still found it frustrating that the opposition was out sprinting me consistently. In all other FIFA games there’s a sprint button but training hadn’t revealed this to me, again did I miss something? Anyway I soon Googled it and found Z was what I needed and boy did that make a difference. Now I can sprint past defenders for one on ones against the keepers and track back to defend, this is the most crucial button of all.

Defending

Definitely the hardest part of FIFA. You basically have two moves, either steal the ball or slide tackle. In other versions slide tackles have been easy and most of the time you win the ball cleanly and don’t give away free kicks. On the Wii it’s the opposite. Trying to win the ball cleanly without giving away a free kick is very very difficult. Again only after several hours of play am I finally managing to successfully slide tackle about 50% of the time. Am I alone in finding this a bit mad??

Graphics

During normal play FIFA on the Wii looks ok. I find the sides of pitches a bit dull at times where there’s a shadow from the stadium and if you’re playing in dark colours, it’s hard to see your players. Also is the pitch “map” top right which can also cover your players, not sure what went wrong there. In replays etc you get to see players faces and the likeness at times is superb. Giggs is my personal fave (yes I always pick United!), though Chris Eagles looks like an escapee from a bad 80s band.

Overall

A fun game to play if not a bit tiresome at times. I found after an hour or so my wrists were sore as were my feet from standing as this is a game I cannot play sitting down. Not a bad additonal to my games collection and enough to keep me amused. The additional mini games are a bit crap but my 6yr old son seems to love them as does my 9yr old daughter who has no interest in the main game so obviously EA got something right there. I am looking forward to PES though as traditionally it’s been the superior game on other platforms for graphics and playability – only time will tell if the Wii version will hold up.

Footnote

Pick United and select the invisible man ie Nani. For some bizarre reason he’s invisible on screen leaving you with an arrow to follow but no visible player underneath!




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