Uh oh. If you can see this, something has gone wrong with the CSS. Bugger.

Normal service will resume shortly. Feel free to read on, things may just look a bit odd. It's probably related to a sudden change in Blogger's features, requiring some strange back end migration trickery.

about

about ben buchanan

Photo of Ben Buchanan

I entered the web industry the same way as most people I know: by studying something else (Journalism and Philosophy, in case you're wondering). I made a hobby into a profession when I realised people were willing to pay me to stuff around with computers.

I'm passionate about accessibility and web standards. The technology exists to provide rich web communications which remain accessible to all people... I believe the web industry needs create sites for users, not in spite of them.

I currently work as Frontend Developer for Atlassian (Sydney, Australia). Previously I worked as Frontend Architect for News Digital Media; and before that as Web Standards Developer for Griffith University (in Brisbane).

you may remember me from such events as...

You can usually find me at WSG Sydney, BarcampSydney, Webjam or in fact anywhere that web geeks have gathered. I created Geeks on the Grass along with my partner in picnic crime Ajay. I also...

qualifications

  • More than 12 years experience creating websites. Plus a short course or two.
  • Currently working on a Graduate Certificate in Information Technology (Web Management) from the Queensland University of Technology.
  • Bachelor of Arts (Journalism & Philosophy) from the University of Queensland.

memberships

Web Industry Professionals Association

WSG Member Web Standards Group

about the 200ok weblog

content

The 200ok Weblog is a space for me to write about Web Stuff™. Web developers are multi-skilled beasts, so it's a multi-faceted topic. It usually strays back to standards and accessibility, though.

tech

The 200ok Weblog is published using Blogger, since I am more interested in writing the blog than maintaining the blog tool.

almost valid

This site is almost valid.

Blogger unfortunately hard-codes some dumb things, which makes the markup less than ideal at times. The validation errors it creates are things that don't cause major issues (that I've seen, at least). It's mostly things like uppercase BR tags inserted in comments; unencoded ampersands and so on. Blogger's inline comments can be problematic; so as a workaround I've got a direct link embedded for screen readers and mobiles. I've had to trade markup purity for usability.

I'd love it if Blogger would come to the standards party, but it doesn't seem to be a priority for what is more of a mass-publishing tool than a standardista's dream. On balance it's still the best tool for what I want.

200ok?

200 OK is the HTTP status for "The request has succeeded." (RFC 2616 10.2.1). Need I say more? :)

about the stamp

Red, square stamp with 200ok translated to Chinese So, what's the deal with the stamp you see on the site, various avatars, my business cards, stickers and badges? It's a stone stamp/stone chop with "200ok" translated as closely as possible in Chinese.

The top two characters are a direct translation of two hundred; the bottom two form "you can" in the sense of "you have permission" which I felt was a reasonably close interpretation of OK in this context (apparently there's no direct equivalent).

The translation and stamp were created by a lovely gentleman in Sydney who makes these stamps for a living. You can find him at the Paddington Markets on most Saturdays.

I do in fact stamp every one of my business cards, by hand, with the stone stamp. So, each card is slighly different.

disclaimer

opinions

Views expressed are my own and not associated with any view of an employer, client, associate, acquaintance, barista, busker or random person I met in the lift.

copyright

All material is copyright Ben Buchanan unless attributed to another source.

privacy

This site doesn't really collect private data, but even if it did I would use it only for good and not for evil.

User details for comments are handled by Blogger's comment system; this includes email addresses entered for followup comments. You can view Blogger's privacy policy for further details.

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Web development and standards, as seen by Ben Buchanan.

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