This document appears to be a presentation on accessibility in web design. It includes definitions and examples for many key accessibility topics from A to Z, such as alt text, braille displays, color contrast, iframes, labels, progressive enhancement, screen readers, validation, and more. The document emphasizes the importance of following guidelines like WCAG to ensure websites are accessible to all users.
This document discusses improving usability for content administrators in Drupal sites. It argues that content creators are the most important users as they use the site every day. While Drupal provides good tools for developers and builders, the interfaces do not necessarily equal good usability for content administrators. The document provides recommendations for how to improve usability for content administrators, including listening to their needs, understanding their workflows beyond just the data model, iterating based on feedback, optimizing entire workflows rather than individual screens, using consistent concepts and labeling, and accepting that some solutions will be unique to individual sites and teams.
This document appears to be a presentation on accessibility in web design. It includes definitions and examples for many key accessibility topics from A to Z, such as alt text, braille displays, color contrast, iframes, labels, progressive enhancement, screen readers, validation, and more. The document emphasizes the importance of following guidelines like WCAG to ensure websites are accessible to all users.
This document discusses improving usability for content administrators in Drupal sites. It argues that content creators are the most important users as they use the site every day. While Drupal provides good tools for developers and builders, the interfaces do not necessarily equal good usability for content administrators. The document provides recommendations for how to improve usability for content administrators, including listening to their needs, understanding their workflows beyond just the data model, iterating based on feedback, optimizing entire workflows rather than individual screens, using consistent concepts and labeling, and accepting that some solutions will be unique to individual sites and teams.
This document summarizes key points from the book "Corporate Social Responsibilities Doing The Most Good for Your Company and Your Cause" by Philip Kotler and Nancy Lee. It discusses why corporations engage in corporate social responsibility through increased sales, brand positioning, and attracting employees. It provides examples of socially responsible business practices like cause promotions, cause-related marketing, corporate social marketing, corporate philanthropy, and community volunteering. It concludes with recommendations for developing socially responsible initiatives that address issues connected to the corporation and measuring outcomes.
The document discusses IBM's partnership with Wimbledon and its campaign objectives. The campaign aimed to showcase IBM's innovation capabilities through its work with Wimbledon and demonstrate how IBM delivers business value. The strategy was to create digital content that showed behind the scenes glimpses of how IBM helps Wimbledon innovate while facing challenges. The overview describes the various digital elements used like outdoor advertising, social media, and websites to promote this message.
The document discusses emerging media and how to engage audiences using new technologies. It presents a spectrum of audience sophistication levels from laggards to the mainstream to early adopters. It argues that technology works best when it provides people with what they want in an easy way, as people's desires haven't changed even as technologies have advanced. To be successful, one must go to where audiences are already engaging with different media and provide content tailored to their sophistication levels and preferences.
Rufus Olins is the Managing Director of Haymarket Brand Media. He sent an email to an email address thanking them and mentioning Brand Republic and traffic growth to the website The Only Republic Worth Joining.
Building Your Agency's Content Strategy PracticeJeff Eaton
The document discusses content strategy and how it can benefit projects. It provides examples of how a content strategy was implemented for two clients, MSNBC and the NAMM Foundation. For MSNBC, the strategy involved understanding existing content, developing content models, and clear workflows to inform parallel design and development. For the NAMM Foundation, workshops were used to understand brand and audience, and inventory, mapping, modeling and responsive design were applied to improve their outdated site. The document emphasizes that using content strategy tools can make projects more successful by focusing on understanding needs and iterating solutions.
The document is notes from a Drupal training course. It introduces some core Drupal concepts like nodes, users, and modules. It then provides an example of a birthday module that allows users to save their birthday, displays it on their profile, and shows a happy birthday message on their birthday. The module utilizes hooks, forms, blocks, and other Drupal APIs.
This document is an introduction to "The Little Red Book", which discusses using old technologies like printed books to share new ideas. It contains definitions for internet terminology like "ad space", "AJAX", "applet", and "avatar". The definitions are intended to explain technical terms in an accessible way using everyday language and examples. The overall document serves as a glossary for internet-related words and concepts.
This document provides an overview of Google's history and evolution from 1995 to 2006. It discusses Google's core search functionality and monetization through ads, as well as its competitors, positioning, and PageRank algorithm. The document also lists ten principles that have guided Google's approach.
GAFAnomics: Using APIs to gain unfair competitive advantage in the network ec...Fabernovel
At FABERNOVEL, we’re convinced APIs are a powerful lever for traditional companies willing to enter and thrive in a world dominated by the GAFA (Google, Amazon, Facebook, Apple), Unicorns (Uber, Airbnb…), Chinese giants (Alibaba, Tencent…) and all similar actors that have deeply changed the way goods and services are produced, shared and distributed.
As outlined in our latest study, these new players share one common feature: they’re all structured as networks, connecting individuals, businesses, information and goods to one another.
Industry 4.0: Merging Internet and FactoriesFabernovel
Industrial IoT and connected objects for factories are part of our research at FABERNOVEL OBJET, our activity dedicated to IoT.
The future of industry is at the crossroads of internet and factories. Some call it INDUSTRY 4.0 or FACTORY 4.0 in reference to the upcoming fourth industrial revolution. Governments and private companies in Germany, UK and the USA have acknowledged the importance of industrial IoT and its central role in future industrial transformation.
The adoption of Industrial Internet has both near-term and long-term impacts and will be characterized by the emergence of new models such as the “Outcome Economy” and the “Autonomous, Pull Economy”.
We believe that INDUSTRY 4.0 is a growth opportunity for industrial companies, and have decrypted this very phenomenon in the following presentation.
This document summarizes key points from the book "Corporate Social Responsibilities Doing The Most Good for Your Company and Your Cause" by Philip Kotler and Nancy Lee. It discusses why corporations engage in corporate social responsibility through increased sales, brand positioning, and attracting employees. It provides examples of socially responsible business practices like cause promotions, cause-related marketing, corporate social marketing, corporate philanthropy, and community volunteering. It concludes with recommendations for developing socially responsible initiatives that address issues connected to the corporation and measuring outcomes.
The document discusses IBM's partnership with Wimbledon and its campaign objectives. The campaign aimed to showcase IBM's innovation capabilities through its work with Wimbledon and demonstrate how IBM delivers business value. The strategy was to create digital content that showed behind the scenes glimpses of how IBM helps Wimbledon innovate while facing challenges. The overview describes the various digital elements used like outdoor advertising, social media, and websites to promote this message.
The document discusses emerging media and how to engage audiences using new technologies. It presents a spectrum of audience sophistication levels from laggards to the mainstream to early adopters. It argues that technology works best when it provides people with what they want in an easy way, as people's desires haven't changed even as technologies have advanced. To be successful, one must go to where audiences are already engaging with different media and provide content tailored to their sophistication levels and preferences.
Rufus Olins is the Managing Director of Haymarket Brand Media. He sent an email to an email address thanking them and mentioning Brand Republic and traffic growth to the website The Only Republic Worth Joining.
Building Your Agency's Content Strategy PracticeJeff Eaton
The document discusses content strategy and how it can benefit projects. It provides examples of how a content strategy was implemented for two clients, MSNBC and the NAMM Foundation. For MSNBC, the strategy involved understanding existing content, developing content models, and clear workflows to inform parallel design and development. For the NAMM Foundation, workshops were used to understand brand and audience, and inventory, mapping, modeling and responsive design were applied to improve their outdated site. The document emphasizes that using content strategy tools can make projects more successful by focusing on understanding needs and iterating solutions.
The document is notes from a Drupal training course. It introduces some core Drupal concepts like nodes, users, and modules. It then provides an example of a birthday module that allows users to save their birthday, displays it on their profile, and shows a happy birthday message on their birthday. The module utilizes hooks, forms, blocks, and other Drupal APIs.
This document is an introduction to "The Little Red Book", which discusses using old technologies like printed books to share new ideas. It contains definitions for internet terminology like "ad space", "AJAX", "applet", and "avatar". The definitions are intended to explain technical terms in an accessible way using everyday language and examples. The overall document serves as a glossary for internet-related words and concepts.
This document provides an overview of Google's history and evolution from 1995 to 2006. It discusses Google's core search functionality and monetization through ads, as well as its competitors, positioning, and PageRank algorithm. The document also lists ten principles that have guided Google's approach.
GAFAnomics: Using APIs to gain unfair competitive advantage in the network ec...Fabernovel
At FABERNOVEL, we’re convinced APIs are a powerful lever for traditional companies willing to enter and thrive in a world dominated by the GAFA (Google, Amazon, Facebook, Apple), Unicorns (Uber, Airbnb…), Chinese giants (Alibaba, Tencent…) and all similar actors that have deeply changed the way goods and services are produced, shared and distributed.
As outlined in our latest study, these new players share one common feature: they’re all structured as networks, connecting individuals, businesses, information and goods to one another.
Industry 4.0: Merging Internet and FactoriesFabernovel
Industrial IoT and connected objects for factories are part of our research at FABERNOVEL OBJET, our activity dedicated to IoT.
The future of industry is at the crossroads of internet and factories. Some call it INDUSTRY 4.0 or FACTORY 4.0 in reference to the upcoming fourth industrial revolution. Governments and private companies in Germany, UK and the USA have acknowledged the importance of industrial IoT and its central role in future industrial transformation.
The adoption of Industrial Internet has both near-term and long-term impacts and will be characterized by the emergence of new models such as the “Outcome Economy” and the “Autonomous, Pull Economy”.
We believe that INDUSTRY 4.0 is a growth opportunity for industrial companies, and have decrypted this very phenomenon in the following presentation.