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Archive for the 'General' Category

Thursday, September 21st, 2006

The BBC this morning reported on the state of web sites in the top 30 UK businesses.  The full article is below:

Retail websites fail access test

By Geoff Adams-Spink
Age & disability correspondent, BBC News website


Photo of someone using a mouse

The internet can be as challenging as the physical environment

A survey of the UK’s 30 most important retail websites shows that none of them meet minimum accessibility standards for disabled shoppers.

The research was carried out last month by Nomensa, a specialist access consultancy firm.

Websites were evaluated using manual and automated testing, looking at retailers’ homepages and their terms and conditions page.

A British Retail Consortium spokesman said the rules need clarification.

‘Online responsibility’

Nomensa used the internationally recognised Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) as the basis for its testing.

Although none of the sites met the minimum accessibility standards, John Lewis, Marks & Spencer and Tesco were considered to have paid particular attention to accessibility.

Nomensa’s managing director, Simon Norris, said the UK’s 10 million disabled people ought to be able to buy a Christmas present online for a friend or family member this year.

“These research findings show that anyone with serious physical impairments, visually impaired people or those who need glasses to read would encounter difficulties and in many cases would give up trying,” he said.

Mr Norris is urging companies to extend their corporate social responsibility programs to include web accessibility.

“I’m calling on the boardrooms of these retailers to really start to take their online responsibility just as seriously,” he said.

Losing sales

Nomensa’s research has found that:

  • Three out of 30 terms and conditions pages achieved basic accessibility standards
  • 23 websites used search and navigational features that would not work without Javascript something that a large number of people do not have enabled
  • 29 of the websites had text that would be difficult to read for people wearing glasses
  • Only Apple computer and John Lewis had added text descriptions to all images which is helpful to blind and partially sighted people
  • 25 of the 30 sites continued to use pop-up windows
  • 29 websites do not use shortcut links to enable people to navigate the page without using a mouse

Mr Norris recommends that companies devise, implement and then monitor their accessibility standards in order not to lose potential income.

According to IMRG, a lobby group of online retailers, 40% of the UK population shopped online in the run up to last Christmas and spent an average of £94 each.

Based on these figures, Nomensa estimates that disabled people could potentially spend £376m, some of which is being lost because of poor accessibility.

Retailers have made huge progress in improving physical access to and within stores
Richard Dodd, British Retail Consortium

The British Retail Consortium said that its members were committed to making their services as accessible as possible.

“Retailers have made huge progress in improving physical access to and within stores,” said spokesman Richard Dodd.

“They also continue to work on making websites easier to use but some online retailers have found that more difficult.”

Legal confusion

The BRC said a lack of information about the extent of legal obligations had hindered progress towards improving accessibility.

IMRG chief executive James Roper said e-retailers were taking their “accessibility responsibilities very seriously” but suggested that the current requirements were “both premature and overambitious”.

The online retail industry was still young, he said, while most e-commerce firms were still unprofitable and technology was evolving rapidly and continuously.

“Many [firms] are striving hard to provide excellent service to all consumers,” Mr Roper said.

Source: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/5360372.stm

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Tuesday, August 29th, 2006

As well as web site design and development the TomatoNetwork team are well experienced in building desktop computers. We like building high spec machines so if anyone is interested in fast office equipment give us a call.

This current machine we’re building has a spec of:

Antec Sonata II Piano Black Quiet Midi Tower – Case
E6300 Core 2 Duo 1.86GHz – Processor
ASUS P5VDC-X SKT775 VIA – Motherboard
Corsair (TWIN2X1024A-6400) XMS2-6400 1024MB – Memory
Western Digital WD2500KS Caviar SE 250GB 7200RPM SATA2/300 – Hard drive
Trust 5.1 Sound Expert Optical – Sound card
PowerColor X1600XT Bravo overclocked edition 256mb – Graphics card
NEC ND3550A 16x DVD±RW Dual Layer Internal IDE – DVD writer
LG GDR-8164BL 16×52 DVD-ROM Internal IDE – DVD reader
Speeze ChillMax 775 Pentium 4 CPU cooler – Processor fan
AKASA All-in one front panel – Lots of input and outputs on the front of the case :-)

Relisys TL966 19″ 600:1 8ms (1280 x 1024) Black MultiMedia TFT Monitor 3 Years Warranty – Two massive 19″ TFT monitors.

custom pc

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Wednesday, August 16th, 2006

Want more accurate statistics for your site, Google Analytics offers the most compressive solution. It offers everything you’d normally see in a stats package as well as some great things that have never been seen. The best feature of it we’ve seen so far is the site overlay. This lets you see exactly where people have been clicking on your site by overlaying it with percentage bars, clicking these bars reveals the number of clicks. To get Google Analytics on your site sign-up at http://www.google.com/analytics and add their code provided to all your site pages. You may require a Gmail account to be able to sign-up as this is not on general release yet.

Google Analytics TomatoNetwork

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Friday, August 11th, 2006

If you have a website built by TomatoNetwork you will have been given access to your statistics package, if not you may need to set one up with you web deisgn company or host. It can be very confusing the difference between unique visitors, visits, hits and so on. Below we have tried to explain this for you in the most simple terms.

Unique Visitors

The unique visitors section of the summary will show the amount of “Unique” or different visitors to a page. This is normally the amount asked for by other webmasters. This is a true number of visitors to a site.

Number of Visits
The number of visits is the amount of users that come to the site including return visitors. This is the amount of unique visitors combined with return visits. So if a user visits a page more then once in a 12 hour period, each of those visits will be counted and displayed here.

Pages
The pages section displays the amount of pages that have been viewed for the month. This basically shows the amount of pages within a site that have been viewed by users throughout the month. Hits Hits are the amount of visits a site receives plus the amount of connections per user. Each user that displays a web page may make multiple connections to the server to download images, text and any other information that may be needed for the page to display. This is all logged and is displayed as the amount of total hits a site receives.

Bandwidth
The bandwidth displays the current bandwidth usage for the month. It also displays the average usage per user. This is the average amount of bandwidth a user may use each visit. This will give a good idea of what the bandwidth usage is like for the month and give a basis for calculating the monthly bandwidth usage.

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Friday, August 4th, 2006

Everyones starting to talk about making sites accessible for disabled users.  TomatoNetwork where one of many who attended the PAS 78 launch in London.  Speakers Tesco and Legal & General gave big relevance to accessible website generating traffic and cutting down on customer complaints.  The principal audience for the PAS 78 are businesses within the UK, but it is a relevant document for charity and volunteer organisations, as well as local and central government. Its also a useful document for web design agencies and web developers as a guide to what is expected of us. It is written from a business perspective and describes the web standards and usability testing needed for producing accessible websites.

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Tuesday, August 1st, 2006

Using Wikipedia as a tool to build up links to your site can bring some great advantages. we have noticed that with many clients using this technique are achieving many hundreds more visits to their site per month. For example a page featuring model Kat Shoob has an external link to her model profile at eye candy corporate events. Since Wikipedia is free and open to add your own information to as long as no one contests it, this is an easy way to build up links and increase traffic.

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Monday, July 31st, 2006

TomatoNetwork are hoping to relocate to sunny Tendering very soon. A high specification, brand new property in an enviable village location providing a tranquil working environment for our staff. Onsite car parking is also provided for clients.

Motorway M25 J28
Railway 1.59 Miles – Weeley
Airport 36.6 Miles – London Stansted Airport

New office

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Saturday, July 29th, 2006

To help increase productivity we have recently purchased Dual 19″ TFT monitors for the office. These Vusys 8ms TFT’s arrived on time and with no dead pixels. One issue with these TFT was thunderflies getting under the screens, so far all have made their way out but in this heat i’m sure it’s not long until one dies and sticks.

vusys tft 19

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Friday, July 28th, 2006

We look at link building from many angles. Although it can be very time-consuming, it is also exceptionally worthwhile.

We break it down into these options

Competitors Links

We analyse several of your targeted phrases, and the top 10 sites for each phrase. We then find what other sites that link to 2 or more of those top 10 sites. We also use a tool which helps us to identify possible sites which are considered “Authorities” for your topics (in the eyes of the search engines).

TomatoNetwork can email your competitors or sites with similar topics requesting link exchange or suggesting a fee for a one way link.

Directory linking

TomatoNetwork research and submit you to directories related to your business. We manually submit your sites one directory at a time and use no automatic software, we also continuosly go back and make sure your still listed.

Text link ads

We have the ability to buy text link ads and other types of advertising space for clients. We work with text link brokers, link auctions, our own inventory, and several large authority websites. Our list of sites where we can place advertising on is not public. These links will be suggested based on your key phrases and budget.

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Thursday, July 27th, 2006

Welcome to the TomatoNetwork blog, here we will be posting news from the TomatoNetwork team as well as keeping you informed about new advances in the web.

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