Google Analytics is a measuring tool that is used for most of the websites these days, it displays statistics on how well your site is doing in terms of visitor traffic and search engine optimization. A common mistake however in doing analytics on your websites is the misinterpretation of the statistics. Here is a top 5 of common mistakes and misconceptions and how to benefit the most of the statistics gathered.
Archive for the ‘Accessibilty’ Category
Please don’t confuse my directions…
I am afflicted by a “disorder” which means I cannot immediately tell my left from my right. Ask me to put my right hand up and I have to think about it. It’s a source of much humour amongst other people but at times can be quite frustrating. I’m also not alone apparently but I have found [...]
AJAX “crawls”? Google to the rescue!
Google has offered their experience and support to make AJAX sites easy to crawl. Sounds like a win-win?
10 Useful Usability Findings and Guidelines…
Smashing Magazine have an excellent article called 10 Useful Usability Findings and Guidelines.
Lots of very good points and observations.
Check it out
The browser that just won’t die…
As a web developer and long time supporter of aesthetic design, especially with regard to good web design, I have long embraced the recent developments that (have continued to) make the web great. I loved AJAX when it first arrived, jQuery is ground breaking and the design standards that have been adopted (and adapted) over [...]
Micro-blogging is it truly for all?
I have always being a fan of blogging, from the analysis of current affairs to the trials and tribulations of getting a bamboo tattoo in Thailand, the diverse topics available ensures that there is something that will interest the most discerning of minds.
Unfortunately, like all good things people decide to start tinkering and attempting to [...]
HTML 5 now?
Among the hot topics covered by the @media conference in London, HTML 5 is one of the most intriguing and remarkable. This is not just because, in all likelihood, it is going to create a new frontier for web design, gradually replacing XHTML, but also because we can already start using it in our work.
Requirement for accessible websites set to soar
According to the Irish Independent today the number of blind people in Ireland is set to reach 35,000 people in the next 25 years add this to the number of people with low vision or who are using an incorrect spectacle prescription and the number of people who will require an accessible website is going [...]