List of colleges using social network websites
A list of colleges using social networking websites such as Facebook, MySpace, Ning, YouTube, etc.:
A list of colleges using social networking websites such as Facebook, MySpace, Ning, YouTube, etc.:
There is interest in/concern about the accessibility of podcasts / audio / video / multimedia materials instructors post from classroom lectures, etc. Below are some links with related information.
Blog entries on the topic of Podcast Accessibility by Jeffrey Daniel Frey, the Web Services Manager for Enterprise Applications in the Information Technology Department at Rice University. He provides technology solutions for faculty, staff, and students on campus as well as teaches new technology courses at the School of Continuing Studies. He is available for podcasting consulting, is involved in the creation of podcasts for businesses and non-profits, and has owned a technical consulting company and an audio/video recording studio).
Thread from a WebAIM discussion board.
Web Captioning, WebAIM article.
WebAIM, Creating Accessible Macromedia Flash Content.
(WebAIM = Web Accessibility In Mind, an *excellent* resource for online
accessibility requirements, tutorials, how-tos!)
How-to info for Making Podcasts Accessible by the High Tech Center at
College of the Redwoods.
Ah ha! A server-based way to hide email addresses from harvesting robots! Uses Apache 2, mod_rewrite, PHP 4 or later.
Graceful E-Mail Obfuscation, by Roel Van Gils, A List Apart, November 6, 2007.
Contact your web server administrator or use .htaccess.
I’ve been using Xenu Link Sleuth (free) to check for broken links. I also use the output report to review web page titles (which are displayed as links in most search engines) and to produce a list of valid links for use with the batch mode of the WDG HTML Validator (100 URLs at a time).
I knew W3C had an Markup Validator and a CSS Validator, but was unaware of the W3C Link Checker until now.
S5 from Eric Meyer is:
a slide show format based entirely on XHTML, CSS, and JavaScript. With one file, you can run a complete slide show and have a printer-friendly version as well. The markup used for the slides is very simple, highly semantic, and completely accessible. Anyone with even a smidgen of familiarity with HTML or XHTML can look at the markup and figure out how to adapt it to their particular needs. Anyone familiar with CSS can create their own slide show theme. It’s totally simple, and it’s totally standards-driven.
JAlbum is free, is Java-based so it runs on Windows and Mac, and has many skins to choose from.
PollDaddy is an online tool for creating free polls to be placed on your website, blog, etc.
A free online tool to create a 60-second video from your photos and music: Animoto at http://animoto.com/: