Wednesday, April 2, 2008

The John Slatin Fund Accessibility Project

Would you like your site reviewed for web accessibility?

The John Slatin Fund Accessibility Project matches accessibility experts with companies that would like a brief review of their site for accessibility. In return, the site owner is asked to contribute a minimum of $500 to The John Slatin Fund. The John Slatin Fund was established to help John’s beloved Anna offset the medical expenses incurred during John’s long illness. Our goal is to raise $25,000 for that purpose.
I'm volunteering my time. How about you?

Spread the word.

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

jollification

Dictionary.com Word of the Day - jollification: merrymaking; revelry.

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Thank you

Here are a few brief glimpses of memories; they don't do justice to the awesomeness that is John Slatin.

I went to dinner with Anna and John then we went to Body Choir. I wasn't sure what to expect, but I was blown away. At first, I felt a little awkward, but I started moving to the music then realized that I was connecting with people without words. Through movement, eye contact, I was interacting with people in ways I never had before. In the car afterwards, I had many questions and we had a wonderful discussion about intimacy - something I've always struggled with. That was a pinnacle discussion for me - one that caused me to question how I think. I'm still growing as a result of that discussion and still have further to grow. As I've read Leukemia Letters over the last 2 years and about all the people surrounding Anna and John, I see that the wisdom and the openness we talked about that night is the strength behind the love and the connections.

June 2005: We were in Brussels for a WCAG WG face-to-face meeting that was to start the following day. John and I were sitting on a bench in a park, Dillon at our feet. I had told family and a couple friends that I was two months pregnant and decided to share the news with John. I had slept every afternoon for the two weeks leading up to the trip and was anxious about how I would manage 8-12 hour days in meetings. "I can't leave the meetings every afternoon. What will I do?" He replied, "If you need to leave, then do it. If people ask, then tell them." I could always count on John for calm and clarity. I could talk with him about things that I couldn't with other people. I didn't know it at the time - but we were both tired. John would return home from that trip and begin the first of many hospital stays.

I wish I could be in Austin this weekend. I want to be part of the energy of the amazing people that surround John and Anna. You both have been influential with your wisdom and your love, your energy and your calm. Thank you. I love you.

Thursday, February 28, 2008

irony

Back in the day, Java was supposed to be our "write once, run anywhere" solution. Today, all those beans live on the server handling service calls from other "write once, run anywhere" RIAs. All that promise of fame and glory and they end up hiding in the background. Poor beans. They just weren't flashy enough. heh.

Thursday, February 21, 2008

Go with the flow

Throughout my programming career, I have learned (and forgotten) Basic, Pascal, C, C++, Java...not to mention all of the various application-specific scripting languages that I can't even remember the names of...but, throughout all that learning and forgetting, one thing remains constant: flow diagrams. Seeing them again this morning is like rediscovering that cozy old blanket from college.

Friday, January 25, 2008

Super Silence

Pepsi ad to give Super Bowl viewers a moment of silence

The pregame advertisement features a joke that originates from the deaf community and will play out on screen over 60 seconds of total silence, a veritable eternity when it comes to the noisiness of Super Bowl ads.

The joke goes like this: Two guys are driving to their friend Bob's house to watch the Super Bowl. Once they get to Bob's street, neither knows which house is his. They sit in the car, arguing, until one of them has an idea. He starts laying on the horn, and one by one, the houses light up and dogs start barking.

One house stays dark: It's Bob's.

Pepsi worked with National Association of the Deaf on this commercial and will sponsor captioning of the Super Bowl. The commercial came about because of an employee's interest that stemmed from attending a church where the services are held in ASL - he is not deaf. Many people volunteered their services to make the commercial happen and it includes two Pepsi employees who are deaf.

It's super exciting to see awareness raised in a humorous way in such a large venue! I really hope it makes people stop, listen, and think.

You can watch the commercial online (but don't press the "play" button, select the commercial - to the right). While I applaud their effort to raise awareness about accessibility and am very excited about their work, their web site is not accessible. Too bad.

Hey, Pepsi! Please add labels to each of the buttons in the Flash app. Thanks!

Friday, January 11, 2008

Haptic Tattoo

I love tattoos. I love inclusion. I love futuristic ideas.

The haptic tattoo is all three.