Podcasts about Web Standards Project

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Best podcasts about Web Standards Project

Latest podcast episodes about Web Standards Project

Presentable
Presentable 51: An Oral History of Web Standards With Jeffrey Zeldman

Presentable

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 13, 2018 57:31


Designer, author, speaker, publisher, podcaster and longtime friend Jeffrey Zeldman joins the show to reminisce on the origin of the Web Standards Project and it's legacy 20 years on.

WeCodeSign Podcast
2x10 - La W3C

WeCodeSign Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2017 62:27


Descripcion del programa Hoy hablamos con Antonio desarrollador y parte del equipo de sistemas de la W3C. Nos contará desde el proceso que lleva la W3C para implementar un standard. Veremos que opciones tenemos como "particulares" para poder aportar al código y las diferentes herramientas que hay disponibles. ¡Esperamos que os guste el episodio y como siempre nos vemos al final! ¿Queréis participar? ¿Queréis participar y ayudarnos a decidir que grabar en WeCodeSign y proponer invitad@s? Aquí podéis participar en WeCodeSign. ¿Queréis participar? ¿Queréis participar y ayudarnos a decidir que grabar en WeCodeSign y proponer invitad@s? Aquí podéis participar en WeCodeSign. Recomendaciones Preguntas rápidas: Antonio Quién me ha inspirado: Richard Stallman Recomiéndanos un recurso: JavaScript: The Definitive Guide Recomiéndanos un recurso: Can I Use Recomiéndanos un recurso: All W3C Standards and Drafts Recomiéndanos a un invitado o invitada: Alberto García Recomiéndanos a un invitado o invitada: Igalia ¿Qué tema te gustaría que tratásemos?: ¿Por qué al público no le interesan ya apenas los aspectos éticos de la tecnología (patentes y licencias de software, código abierto, derecho a la intimidad, monopolios, formatos abiertos, etc), y qué podemos hacer? Contacta con: Antonio Web de Antonio Links del programa Lea Verou Jeff Jaffe W3C community groups Markup Validation Service W3C Manuel Rego w3.org Diez cosas que (quizá) no sabías sobre el W3C y sus estándares W3C Jobs W3C Developers W3C Github World Wide Web Consortium Process Document W3C Internationalization (i18n) Activity Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI) Semantic Web WebAssembly WebVR Community W3C Workshop on Web & Virtual Reality w3devcampus edX - W3Cx Front-End Web Developer Siete ideas para estudiantes de la ETSIIT Recomendaciones de Ignacio The Web Standards Project HTML 5.1 2nd Edition HTML 5.2 SVG 2 new features Test suites for Web-platform specs Patrocinadores Fictizia.com Contacta con Ignacio Web de WeCodeSign Twitter de WeCodeSign eMail de WeCodeSign Web de Ignacio Villanueva Twitter de Ignacio Villanueva

The Big Web Show
Episode 146: Know Your Web Design History – Glenn Davis of Project Cool, Cool Site of the Day, and The Web Standards Project

The Big Web Show

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2016 54:55


Glenn Davis is the creator of Cool Site of the Day; cofounder of Project Cool; and cofounder, Executive Committee member, and essayist for The Web Standards Project, which he also hosted. Glenn was a leading force behind Liquid Design, an approach that predates Responsive Web Design by about 20 years. He taught everyone how to do “DHTML” via his Project Cool tutorials. In the Silicon Valley from 1994 through the early 2000s, Glenn was a huge creative force. In a lively hour, Glenn and host Jeffrey Zeldman discuss life before the animated GIF; “perceived bandwidth;” building their first websites; getting from Gopher to the web; SLIP and PPP connections; discovering UNIX; the story behind Cool Site of the Day; the battle for standards in our browsers; the web then versus the web now; and much, much more. Brought to you by: Braintree (To learn more visit BraintreePayments.com/BigWebShow)

The Big Web Show
146: Know Your Web Design History – Glenn Davis of Project Cool, Cool Site of the Day, and The Web Standards Project

The Big Web Show

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2016 54:55


Glenn Davis is the creator of Cool Site of the Day; cofounder of Project Cool; and cofounder, Executive Committee member, and essayist for The Web Standards Project, which he also hosted. Glenn was a leading force behind Liquid Design, an approach that predates Responsive Web Design by about 20 years. He taught everyone how to do “DHTML” via his Project Cool tutorials. In the Silicon Valley from 1994 through the early 2000s, Glenn was a huge creative force. In a lively hour, Glenn and host Jeffrey Zeldman discuss life before the animated GIF; “perceived bandwidth;” building their first websites; getting from Gopher to the web; SLIP and PPP connections; discovering UNIX; the story behind Cool Site of the Day; the battle for standards in our browsers; the web then versus the web now; and much, much more.

The Record
Seattle Before the iPhone #9 - Mike Lee

The Record

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2014 64:13


This episode was recorded 17 May 2013 live and in person at Omni's beautiful offices overlooking Lake Union in Seattle. You can download the m4a file or subscribe in iTunes. (Or subscribe to the podcast feed.) Mike Lee, Appsterdam founder, has worked at Alaska Airlines, Delicious Monster (with Wil Shipley), Apple, and is now Chief Lemur at New Lemurs. This episode is sponsored by Hover. Hover makes domain name management easy. And it's a snap to transfer domains from other registrars using their valet service. Get 10% off your first purchase with the promotional code BMF. (BMF -- Be My Friend — is Mike Lee's Twitter handle.) You notice how people with a lot of domains are always talking about Hover? It's because of their excellent service. Take a look. This episode is also sponsored by Microsoft Azure Mobile Services. Mobile Services is a great way to provide backend services — syncing and other things — for your iPhone, iPad, and Mac apps. It's high level — you can get more done with less work. It's also deep: write JavaScript in your favorite text editor. Test with mocha. Deploy with git. Things we mention, in order of appearance (mostly): Kurt Cobain Grunge Honolulu Hawaii University of Puget Sound Tacoma Puget Sound Alaska Airlines SeaTac Lead ramp agent Skilled labor 1993 Choose Your Own Adventure DHTML Flash Web Standards Project XML Java C# DotNet Macintosh PC Microsoft Windows Windows 95 Mac OS X Terrorist watch list WWDC JavaOne Objective-C Xcode 2005 2001 Renoir Hotel WWDC Student Scholarship Wil Shipley Wil Shipley's Speech on the Indie Dream Devry FedEx Core Data Bill Bumgarner Federal Way I-5 Delicious Library Apple Design Award Campus Bash Denny's Omni Group Rumpus Room Apple Store Barnes & Noble Lucas Newman Mike Matas Knoxville Samurai Yoko Ono Seattle Xcoders Gus Mueller Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle Dave Winer Superman IL 7 John Geleynse Lemur Chemistry Cabel Sasser “Hi, I Make Macintosh Software” T-shirt altWWDC Debug podcast Tapulous Tap Tap Revenge iFart DTS IL 3 Caffè Macs Rands Matt Drance Michael Jurewitz

Non Breaking Space Show

Our guest for this episode is Matt May who is a developer, technologist, and accessibility advocate at Adobe. Matt May is a developer, technologist, and accessibility advocate who is responsible for working internally and externally with Adobe product teams and customers to address accessibility in Adobe products, ensure interoperability with assistive technologies, and make customers aware of the many accessibility features that already exist in Adobe products. Prior to joining Adobe, May worked for W3C/WAI on many of the core standards in web accessibility, led the Web Standards Project's Accessibility Task Force, helped to architect one of the first online grocery sites, HomeGrocer.com, and co-founded Blue Flavor, a respected web and mobile design consultancy. May is an accomplished speaker, having presented at dozens of conferences including Web 2.0 Expo, SXSW Interactive, CSUN Conference on Technology and Persons with Disabilities, Podcast and Portable Media Expo, and the International World Wide Web Conference, to name just a few. His book, Universal Design for Web Applications, co-authored with Wendy Chisholm, was published by O'Reilly in November 2008.

Goodstuff Master Audio Feed
Non Breaking Space Show 36: Matt May

Goodstuff Master Audio Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 2, 2013


Our guest for this episode is Matt May who is a developer, technologist, and accessibility advocate at Adobe. Matt May is a developer, technologist, and accessibility advocate who is responsible for working internally and externally with Adobe product teams and customers to address accessibility in Adobe products, ensure interoperability with assistive technologies, and make customers aware of the many accessibility features that already exist in Adobe products. Prior to joining Adobe, May worked for W3C/WAI on many of the core standards in web accessibility, led the Web Standards Project’s Accessibility Task Force, helped to architect one of the first online grocery sites, HomeGrocer.com, and co-founded Blue Flavor, a respected web and mobile design consultancy. May is an accomplished speaker, having presented at dozens of conferences including Web 2.0 Expo, SXSW Interactive, CSUN Conference on Technology and Persons with Disabilities, Podcast and Portable Media Expo, and the International World Wide Web Conference, to name just a few. His book, Universal Design for Web Applications, co-authored with Wendy Chisholm, was published by O'Reilly in November 2008.

Non Breaking Space Show

Our guest for this episode is Matt May who is a developer, technologist, and accessibility advocate at Adobe. Matt May is a developer, technologist, and accessibility advocate who is responsible for working internally and externally with Adobe product teams and customers to address accessibility in Adobe products, ensure interoperability with assistive technologies, and make customers aware of the many accessibility features that already exist in Adobe products. Prior to joining Adobe, May worked for W3C/WAI on many of the core standards in web accessibility, led the Web Standards Project’s Accessibility Task Force, helped to architect one of the first online grocery sites, HomeGrocer.com, and co-founded Blue Flavor, a respected web and mobile design consultancy. May is an accomplished speaker, having presented at dozens of conferences including Web 2.0 Expo, SXSW Interactive, CSUN Conference on Technology and Persons with Disabilities, Podcast and Portable Media Expo, and the International World Wide Web Conference, to name just a few. His book, Universal Design for Web Applications, co-authored with Wendy Chisholm, was published by O’Reilly in November 2008.

The Tablet Show
Aaron Gustafson On Web Standards and Progressive Enhancement

The Tablet Show

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2013 52:00


Carl and Richard talk to Aaron Gustafson about web standards and progressive enhancement. Aaron is part of the Web Standards Project and so the conversation starts off about it's role in the maintenance of web standards - resisting the fragmentation of features in various browsers. From there, Aaron digs into adaptive web design through progressive enhancement. What does it take to retrofit a legacy web page into more current techniques? Aaron talks about a variety of strategies to help you get a great mobile web experience. Also listen for comparisons of native, hybrid and web-based mobile applications!

The Big Web Show
Episode 79: Eric A. Meyer

The Big Web Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2013 64:15


In Episode No. 79 of The Big Web Show ("everything web that matters"), host Jeffrey Zeldman interviews CSS guru, Microformats co-founder, O'Reilly and New Riders author, and An Event Apart co-founder Eric A. Meyer (@meyerweb) about upcoming CSS modules including grid layout, flexbox, and regions; his career trajectory from college graduate webmaster to world-renowned author, consultant, and lecturer; founding and running a virtual community (CSS-Discuss); becoming an O'Reilly writer; the early days of the Mosaic Browser and The Web Standards Project's CSS Samurai; "The Web Behind" variation of The Web Ahead podcast, and more. Links for this episode:http://twitter.com/meyerwebhttp://meyerweb.comhttp://aneventapart.comhttp://dev.w3.org/csswg/css3-regions/http://www.w3.org/TR/css3-grid-layout/http://dev.w3.org/csswg/css3-flexbox/http://css-discuss.orghttp://microformats.orgThis episode of The Big Web Show is sponsored by Shutterstock.com. Get 30% off any package using discount code BIGWEBSHOW1.

css shutterstock new riders jeffrey zeldman microformats event apart web standards project eric a meyer
Goodstuff Master Audio Feed
Non Breaking Space Show 10: Aarron Walter

Goodstuff Master Audio Feed

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2012


Aarron has been building websites professionally since 1999, and taught interactive design courses at colleges including Temple University, The University of Georgia, and The Art Institute of Atlanta since 2002. In 2007 he joined The Web Standards Project, and for three years lead the development of the InterACT curriculum project – an open curriculum designed to bridge the gap between the Web industry and education. Aarron is the lead user experience designer at The Rocket Science Group – makers of MailChimp, and is the author of *Building Findable Website* and *Designing for Emotion*.

Required Listening
Episode 43: Aarron Walter and the Web Standards Project Interact Curriculum

Required Listening

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2012 46:31


Web Directions Podcast
Patrick Lauke - Brave New World of HTML5

Web Directions Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2010 49:39


HTML5 was originally called Web Applications 1.0, but that doesn’t mean it’s only for scripters - there’s plenty for markup monkeys as well as JavaScript junkies. We’ll look at new structural elements in HTML5, and how they can boost accessibility, how to style them (even in IE!). We’ll check out how new semantics can reduce the JS you need to write/copy by adding functionality natively to the browser, and how to add sexy open standard video to your pages with no Flash, no JavaScript, just a big hunk o’ open-web love. Patrick Lauke works as Web Evangelist in the Developer Relations team at Opera Software ASA. In a previous life he worked as Web Editor for the University of Salford, where in 2003 he implemented one of the first thoroughly web standards based sites in the sector. Patrick has been engaged in the discourse on standards and accessibility since early 2001 - regularly speaking at conferences and contributing to a variety of web development and accessibility related mailing lists and initiatives such as the Web Standards Project. Published works include a chapter in Web Accessibility: Web Standards and Regulatory Compliance, released by Friends of Ed in 2006, as well as various articles for .net magazine, where he sits on the advisory panel. Follow Patrick on Twitter: @patrick_h_lauke Licensed as Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/).

CRE: Technik, Kultur, Gesellschaft
CRE107 Barrierefreiheit im Web

CRE: Technik, Kultur, Gesellschaft

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2009 118:35


Accessibility war lange Zeit das schwarze Schaf im Web, kommt aber durch eine Reihe von Gesetzen zur Verfplichtung zur Barrierefreiheit und auch durch einen brandneuen Standard der W3C zu neuer Aufmerksamkeit. Im Gespräch mit Tim Pritlove erzählen Tomas Caspers und Jan Eric Hellbusch von der Entstehung der Accessibility-Bewegung, über technische Standards und was man bei Ihrer Anwendung berücksichtigen sollte. Unter anderem geht es um folgende Themen: Geburt des Web Standards Project, Auswirkung der Farbwahl in Webseiten für Farbenfehlsichtige, Bedeutung der Struktur und semantischem Markup für Blinde, Vorteile von barrierefreiem Design für nicht-behinderte Nutzer, Screenreader-Programme und vergleichbare Funktionalitäten in Betriebssystemen, Aspekte der Gebärdensprache, Aufbau, Anwendung und Testbarkeit der Web Content Accessibility Guidelines der W3C, Gesetzliche Vorgaben und Verpflichtung zur Barrierefreiheit für Behörden und öffentliche Körperschaften und Accessibility für Podcasts.

Web Directions Podcast
Real World Accessibility for Real People - Derek Featherstone

Web Directions Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2008 60:02


When we follow the principles of web standards, we write valid HTML and CSS, unobtrusive JavaScript and follow WCAG and other accessibility guidelines. This simple act goes a long way to creating an accessible web site, application or service. At the same time, many sites that don’t utilize all that is good and wholesome about web standards perform surprisingly well when they are used by people with disabilities. How can we get the best of both worlds to create standards-based solutions that are highly usable for real people (including those with disabilities) in the real world? In this session, we’ll dissect several examples from real sites and apps to learn about accessibility problems that arise from design and development decisions and what we can do to create a more accessible user experience for all people, regardless of their ability. Derek Featherstone is a well known instructor, speaker and developer with expertise in web accessibility consulting. Derek delivers technical training that is engaging, informative and immediately applicable. A high-quality instructor, he draws on his background as a former high school teacher plus seven years running his web development and accessibility consultancy Further Ahead. His experience includes hands-on development, web accessibility consulting and training. He advises many government agencies, educational institutions and private sector companies, providing them with expert accessibility testing and review, and recommendations for improving the accessibility of their websites to all people. As a member of The Web Standards Project, Derek serves on two task forces: Accessibility/Assistive Devices and DOM Scripting. He is a dedicated advocate for standards that ensure simple, affordable access to web technologies for all. Licensed as Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/).

Web Directions Podcast
Think like a mountain - Andy Clark

Web Directions Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2007 57:06


Once seen as unsophisticated, childish and of low artistic value, comic-book art and culture has inspired artists and designers for generations and are now are often untapped resource for web design inspiration. In this session, designer and author of Transcending CSS, Andy Clarke will examine comic book layout, conventions and colour in the context of making inspirational designs for today’s web. Andy Clarke has been working on the web for almost ten years. He is a visual web designer based in the UK and started his design consultancy Stuff and Nonsense in 1998. As lead designer and creative director, his clients include national and international businesses, charities and government bodies. Andy is a member of the Web Standards Project where he redesigned the organization’s web site in 2006. He is also an invited expert to the W3C’s CSS Working Group. Andy regularly educates web designers on how to create beautiful, accessible web sites and he speaks at workshops and conference events worldwide. He writes about design and popular culture on his blog, All That Malarkey and is the author of Transcending CSS: The Fine Art of Web Design. Licensed as Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa-nc/3.0/).