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Simon Dickson's gov-tech blog, active 2005-14. Because permalinks.

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  • 10 Dec 2007
    e-government

    'Governance of Britain': Puffbox helps rewrite the UK's constitution

    Puffbox‘s latest project was unleashed today; working alongside Jeremy Gould at the Ministry of Justice, we’ve built a WordPress-based website in support of the Whitehall-wide programme of UK constitutional reform, going under the banner Governance of Britain.

    As regular readers will know, I’ve started specialising in blog-powered websites which aren’t actually blogs. And this one is probably the least bloggy of the lot, so far. (For now, anyway; the functionality’s there when they want it.) At its heart is a ‘what’s new’ function, keeping track of the various announcements and consultations happening across Government. And as you’d expect, there are a few supplementary, ‘static’ pages explaining what’s going on.

    There are a couple of ‘innovations’ (using the term rather loosely, I admit) worthy of note. One is the use of categorisation in the blog posts news updates. We’ve used WordPress’s notion of parent/child categories to build a list of subjects, and a list of departments. So if you want to see any announcements related to Parliament, let’s say, or announcements by HM Treasury, then there’s a page for that. And because it’s WordPress, you can access this ‘page’ as an RSS feed. (Which explains something I wrote a couple of weeks back…)

    I’ve been trying to do something like this for a while; the implications for cross-government working are huge. You, in your Whitehall department, can write stuff into the Governance site; and we can pump it back to you in RSS format, for your own site to republish (if you want). In other words, it’s the ability to get the best of both worlds: a page on your own corporate site, and inclusion within the unified web presence. A real-world example of joined-up working… if your corporate site is able to process basic RSS. We do the hard part at our end; we can’t make it any easier for you. But I fear very few will be able to receive it. (Please prove me wrong, folks.)

    The other ‘innovation’ is the page of ‘What others are saying‘, powered by del.icio.us. Technically, it’s just a republished RSS feed (um, see above). But I think it’s an important step for a government website to go out of its way to point to relevant stuff elsewhere – newspapers, magazines, blogs, anywhere online.

    We’re using del.icio.us for a couple of reasons. One, because it’s a really nice way to save web links; and it delivers an easy-to-process RSS feed which we can integrate directly into our pages. (Yes, even our homepage.) But equally of course, this means we’re in the del.icio.us community – so if people want to tell us about pages we might want to read, they can do this via del.icio.us. Just tag it ‘for:governanceofbritain’, and we’ll see it in our ‘links for you’ inbox.

    We’ve also hijacked some other blog functionality: for example, the list of ‘recent documents’ on the homepage is actually managed by the WordPress ‘blogroll’. Nothing particularly special or clever in that, but it provides an easy-to-use interface for non-technical people to keep that list up-to-date.

    It all came together very quickly, almost too quickly; and it’s far from the prettiest site I’ve ever done. But again, it’s proof that you really can get from nought to a full-featured, multi-authored, two-way communicating, CMS-driven site in a couple of weeks. It’s a site which makes real efforts to engage with the rest of the web. And it tries a few things which might come off, and might not. We’ll all learn something as a result.

  • 10 Dec 2007
    company, e-government, politics
    consultation, delicious, governanceofbritain, jeremygould, ministryofjustice, wordpress

    'Governance of Britain': Puffbox helps rewrite the UK's constitution

    Puffbox‘s latest project was unleashed today; working alongside Jeremy Gould at the Ministry of Justice, we’ve built a WordPress-based website in support of the Whitehall-wide programme of UK constitutional reform, going under the banner Governance of Britain.

    As regular readers will know, I’ve started specialising in blog-powered websites which aren’t actually blogs. And this one is probably the least bloggy of the lot, so far. (For now, anyway; the functionality’s there when they want it.) At its heart is a ‘what’s new’ function, keeping track of the various announcements and consultations happening across Government. And as you’d expect, there are a few supplementary, ‘static’ pages explaining what’s going on.

    There are a couple of ‘innovations’ (using the term rather loosely, I admit) worthy of note. One is the use of categorisation in the blog posts news updates. We’ve used WordPress’s notion of parent/child categories to build a list of subjects, and a list of departments. So if you want to see any announcements related to Parliament, let’s say, or announcements by HM Treasury, then there’s a page for that. And because it’s WordPress, you can access this ‘page’ as an RSS feed. (Which explains something I wrote a couple of weeks back…)

    I’ve been trying to do something like this for a while; the implications for cross-government working are huge. You, in your Whitehall department, can write stuff into the Governance site; and we can pump it back to you in RSS format, for your own site to republish (if you want). In other words, it’s the ability to get the best of both worlds: a page on your own corporate site, and inclusion within the unified web presence. A real-world example of joined-up working… if your corporate site is able to process basic RSS. We do the hard part at our end; we can’t make it any easier for you. But I fear very few will be able to receive it. (Please prove me wrong, folks.)

    The other ‘innovation’ is the page of ‘What others are saying‘, powered by del.icio.us. Technically, it’s just a republished RSS feed (um, see above). But I think it’s an important step for a government website to go out of its way to point to relevant stuff elsewhere – newspapers, magazines, blogs, anywhere online.

    We’re using del.icio.us for a couple of reasons. One, because it’s a really nice way to save web links; and it delivers an easy-to-process RSS feed which we can integrate directly into our pages. (Yes, even our homepage.) But equally of course, this means we’re in the del.icio.us community – so if people want to tell us about pages we might want to read, they can do this via del.icio.us. Just tag it ‘for:governanceofbritain’, and we’ll see it in our ‘links for you’ inbox.

    We’ve also hijacked some other blog functionality: for example, the list of ‘recent documents’ on the homepage is actually managed by the WordPress ‘blogroll’. Nothing particularly special or clever in that, but it provides an easy-to-use interface for non-technical people to keep that list up-to-date.

    It all came together very quickly, almost too quickly; and it’s far from the prettiest site I’ve ever done. But again, it’s proof that you really can get from nought to a full-featured, multi-authored, two-way communicating, CMS-driven site in a couple of weeks. It’s a site which makes real efforts to engage with the rest of the web. And it tries a few things which might come off, and might not. We’ll all learn something as a result.

  • 7 Dec 2007
    Uncategorised

    Pointless ALT tags

    This one’s going to be controversial. I’m doing a lot of coding at the minute, sticking as best I can (naturally) to using DIVs, CSS and all that. It’s quite refreshing to realise that you can almost entirely eliminate imagery from the page code itself. But, of course, not always. And if you’re using inline images, you have to use ALT text, for accessibility and all that. Right? Well, maybe. I’m no longer convinced that it’s an absolute.

    The W3C guidelines are pretty clear. Indeed, it’s actually checkpoint 1.1. ‘Provide a text equivalent for every non-text element (e.g., via “alt”…’ But let’s bear in mind these guidelines were published eight and half years ago: the days of banner imagery, text in GIF files, and all that. Most of which, thankfully, is behind us.

    Here’s the quandry. Let’s say you have an article about Joe Soap. You’ve got Joe Soap’s name in the headline, and Joe Soap’s name throughout the article. You decide to add a picture of Joe Soap to make your page look a bit prettier. It’s just any old picture of Joe Soap; it’s not directly relevant to the story. Do you:

    • interrupt the screen reader’s passage through the text of the story, to say ‘it’s an image of Joe Soap’?  (Like it’s going to be an image of something else?) or
    • leave the ALT text blank?

    My inclination is the latter. It’s surely better, in terms of usability generally, to make a judgement call, rather than relying on the absolute. Does the reader need to know what the image is? Is it essential / important / helpful to the reader’s experience? It may not be.

    The Wikipedia page on the subject says: ‘While the use of meaningful alt text is necessary to comply with accessibility standards, and is good practice, sometimes an image is used for purely decorative purposes. In this case, one should use an empty alt attribute (alt=””).’ That sounds about right to me. But strictly speaking, that’s not what the W3C guidelines say… and that’s what we’re supposedly held to.

  • 7 Dec 2007
    Uncategorised

    More on that new BBC homepage

    More details emerging about the new BBC homepage, courtesy of Martin Belam. We’re getting drag-and-drop widgets (BBC content only), changing header colours, a big search box, big fonts. All much more 2.0-y. But I can’t remember the last time I actually looked at the BBC homepage itself.

    It’ll apparently be launched in December ‘as a see our new homepage and then fully in January’. The URL looks like being www.bbc.co.uk/home/beta but it’s password-protected as I write this. Here’s the best screengrab I’ve seen so far, showing a few sample customisations straight outta Ballymena (hai).

  • 6 Dec 2007
    Uncategorised

    New Sky News design? Hardly.

    I think it’s a bit much for Sky News to be heralding a ‘newly designed site’ – when in truth, all they’ve really done is shuffle the below-the-fold links on their homepage. The special Madeleine homepage has disappeared from the navigation (although curiously, they’re promising to keep updating it?), and there’s a new Media section which is too lite to cause the Guardian to lose any sleep.

    On the upside though, Steve Bennedik’s piece on the (occasional) Editors’ Blog points tantalisingly to ‘an attractive new video player which will include the facility to build playlists and play full-screen’. Attractive doesn’t count for much. But playlists are certainly interesting, albeit a technology I was trying to get them to pursue seven years ago; and with the new Flash player supporting HD-quality video through the H.264 codec, the prospect of full-screen video sounds intriguing.

  • 3 Dec 2007
    e-government

    Foreign Office Hajj blog

    Another new FCO blog launched today, this time following the British Hajj Delegation, a relatively new development in consular protection which will look after the 25,000 British Muslims doing their pilgrimage to Makkah. A blog is a terrific way to give this team a presence; good to see them doing the YouTube thing on day one, too.

  • 27 Nov 2007
    Uncategorised

    Whitehall people: can your site process RSS?

    A question for anybody reading this here blog from a Whitehall web team. (Yes, I know you’re out there… just cos you’re too shy to raise your head above the parapet!)

    I’m doing some preparatory work for a website which has implications for (and hopefully, buy-in from) several central government departments. Here’s the theory: if you write your material into our new site, we’ll pump it back to you as RSS, and you can do all sorts of clever XML-y things with it at your end. The same material becomes available to two (or more) websites, and everyone’s a winner.

    So here’s the question: if you went to your IT / web support / techie team, and said ‘can we consume and republish data from this RSS feed on our pages somehow?‘… how would they respond? Answers in the comments or, more likely, via the secrecy of the Puffbox.com feedback form. Please guys, surprise me…

  • 27 Nov 2007
    Uncategorised

    Greetings from my neighbours' Wii

    S & S next door have very kindly let me borrow their Wii while they’ve got the builders in. So I’m taking the opportunity to try out the web browsing.

    It’s much better than I expected, but then again, it’s ‘powered by Opera’, who specialise in making the web work in odd places. Typing with the wireless controller is getting easier by the second but it’s not really sustainable. Page browsing is a dream though. As if Guitar Hero wasn’t reason enough to buy one..!

  • 27 Nov 2007
    Uncategorised

    The new BBC homepage?

    Ooops. Looks like somebody had a camera handy when they showed the new BBC homepage at Saturday’s Google-hosted, BBC Backstage-organised BarCamp. Not a lot to get excited about, really – although the prominent button top-left to ‘customise your homepage’ is intriguing.

  • 23 Nov 2007
    company, e-government
    consultation, lorddarzi, nhs, ournhs, puffbox, typepad, wordpress

    Health minister now blogging, courtesy of Puffbox

    Today sees the launch of version 2 of the website I designed and built for Lord Darzi’s national review of the NHS. V1 was built in double-quick time during the summer, and for reasons of cost and speed, used the Typepad blogging platform. Over the last month or so, Typepad’s limitations have become more and more apparent… so it was time to migrate to WordPress. Which, of course, is what I’d always wanted.

    All the juicy new stuff hangs off the homepage. ‘Latest news’ is (as you’d expect) a listing of the top news updates, using a special ‘homepage’ category to give the authors total control. ‘Lord Darzi’s blog’ is the latest blog to be written by a government minister, but unlike some, we’re positively encouraging comments. Finally, there’s the ‘latest video’: the review team is producing quite a lot of video content, so we’re sticking it on YouTube, and using YouTube’s little-known RSS feed functionality (with a bit of string manipulation) to pump it back into the site.

    The primary navigation is a mix of blog categories and static ‘pages’: hey, if you dig deep enough, there’s even an old-school image map! How long is it since I did one of those? We haven’t made any distinction between the two; I’m not sure it really matters to the punters.

    As it’s WordPress, we’ve got full comment functionality if we want it. The plan is that blog posts should generally have comments enabled, but news posts won’t. However, if we fancy it, we can. To draw attention to the items where comments are ‘on’, there’s a little speech bubble icon which appears against the relevant headlines. A minor thing, but it catches the eye really well.

    Overall, it’s taken less than a week to recode the templates, develop the new functionality, and import the content. Importing from Typepad was relatively painless: the initial process took seconds, but then you’ve got the hassle of setting summaries for each item, identifying and repointing all the manual inline links, etc etc. I’m glad there wasn’t too much content to worry about. DNS changes and server reconfiguration took about a day and a half, which was a real disappointment, but at least it’s done now.

    I’m really pleased with it; the initial site was OK, particularly given the laughably short timeframe, but I knew we could do better. I’m afraid the exercise has put me off using Typepad, though: although it does have some pseudo-CMS functionality, my feeling was that it’s too tied to the concept of blogging.

    Next steps? We’re thinking of a photo gallery, and maybe even some delegated authoring responsibility. But that’s all for another day. My next WordPress-in-government project is looming, and is likely to be even bigger. 😉

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