Sometimes, I get so enmeshed in the technical that it's good to take a step back and look at our web site (and web sites in general) and say "what do we need to consider in the broader picture". I had this opportunity yesterday evening, as I ran a short session to look at some PHP issues.
A couple of broader questions ... for
you to consider about
your site ...
What do we need to consider as well as the code?
Copyright Do we have a copyright statement? Do we own copyright on all the images and any text we have copied and pasted on to the site? Do we have permission from the people who we show or quote to show or quote them?
Browser Portability We've developed the site on Internet Explorer. Does it work on Firefox and other browsers too? How does it look on a reduced size screen? Does it print nicely - and does it print nicely on both European and American paper sizes?
Security Is it open to injection attacks? Can submissions of inappropriate material be easily made to the site? Do we have any data files which have accidentally been given URLs?
Findability How easy are we to find through the search engines? Do we have URLs which will make our pages stand out? Are we found on the correct terms? When people arrive at our site, do they arrive at an appropriate page? Do our URLs remain unaltered so that search engines will continue to send people to pages that continue to exist?
Maintainability If When something has to be changed, how easy will it be? Can we add an extra box onto a form, an extra page into a navigable set, an extra validation check into a user entry and have that change be consistently applied once it's been written and tested a single time? Can we avoid ending up with a mish-mash of different fonts, colours and look-and-feels?
Usability Do people find what they want on our web site? And if they do, is it in a form that they can make the use of it that they want?
Disability Discrimination Is our site accessible to those with various disabilities - people who require larger text, people who are colour blind (that's 8% of males in this country), people who are dyslexic, and people who require the text to be provided in shorter blocks?
Who is [this] web site for?
That's a big question ... which I've answered with regard to our web site.
Prospective Delegates ... Start at
our public course schedule or at details of private courses
at our centre or
at your office
Current Delegates ... will find all the examples on their course under the course schedule
[example] Perl Programming, and updated notes indexed on
The Horse's Mouth.
Past Delegates ... will find the source code of all the training course examples, plus technical articles, sorted training module by training module. There's a
full module index for you to start from.
Hotel Guests ... are catered for by our
Well House Manor web site, which has appropriate links back and forth.
Technical questioners ... should land on the subject that's of interest to them - for example
Using MySQL databases from PHP. There's also a
technical subject index available.
Staff ... have a common page
here which contains all the critical information we need to access rapidly; if you visit the page, though, you'll only see limited information whereas we see the status of the hotel rooms, who is signed in on duty, notes back and forth between the staff, and an indicator as to what our front door greeting screen is saying.
Friends and family ... can keep updated via
The Horse's Mouth where a proportion of articles will be "newsy" rather than technical and ...
Community Interest Where individual interests / groups with which we are concerned can start. We have
Melksham Chamber of Commerce diary and news, we have the
First Great Western Coffeeshop, and we we have the obscure like the
Larkhill Military Railway at Druid's Lodge and
Ratfyn Junction.
(written 2009-03-09)
Associated topics are indexed as below, or enter http://melksh.am/nnnn for individual articles
A211 - Web Application Design and Deployment [23] Skills and responsibilities - (2004-08-22)
[356] Sudoku helper or sudoku cheat - (2005-06-23)
[443] Server side scripting of styles to suit the browser - (2005-09-12)
[659] Web Application Components - (2006-03-28)
[767] Finding the language preference of a web site visitor - (2006-06-18)
[1198] From Web to Web 2 - (2007-05-21)
[1256] What country are you in? How we find out on our web site - (2007-07-03)
[1351] Compressing web pages sent out from server. Is it worth it? - (2007-09-14)
[1545] Letting new visitors know we provide training courses - (2008-02-19)
[1547] New bathing idea for hotels from Hotelympia - (2008-02-20)
[1798] What does an browser understand? What does an HTML document contain? - (2008-09-15)
[3532] Sharing the user experience - designing a form with the customer in mind - (2011-11-29)
A050 - Web Deployment - General [116] The next generation of programmer - (2004-11-13)
[2099] Should I maintain the programming code on my own website? - (2009-03-23)
[2568] Forums for your Melksham and open source discussions - (2010-01-09)
[2595] Twelve skills / knowledges needed for the design of a web site - (2010-01-24)
[3891] The components of an Apache httpd / Tomcat / MySQL stack and what each does - (2012-10-13)
[4434] Public training courses - upcoming dates - (2015-02-21)
Some other Articles
A New Advert for Well House ManorSupporting Parkinsons and TrainsWeekday or Weekend PHP, Python and Perl classes?Extra PHP ExamplesCopyright, Portability and other nontechnical web site issuesSetting up a MySQL database from PHPConverting to Perl - the sort of programs you will writeEfficient calls to subs in Perl - avoid duplication, gain speedPlaying CatchupPerl - lists do so much more than arrays