HTML Writers Guild Newsletter Volume 7 Number 7, 27 April 2001 http://www.hwg.org/ mailto:editor@hwg.org Table of Contents 1. The AWARE Center Could Use Your Help! 2. Texts Available for Visually-Impaired HWG Students. 3. Annual Membership Meeting set for April 26. 4. Upcoming Online Classes: Take an HWG Class! 5. Why Did I Get This Email? And Other HWG-News FAQs (How to change your email address, how to unsubscribe, and more.) 1. The AWARE Center Could Use Your Help! (Kynn Bartlett, AWARE Center Director, aware@hwg.org) Want to help with an important HWG project? The Accessible Web Authoring Resources and Education (AWARE) Center, located at http://www.awarecenter.org/, is a resource for web designers and others seeking information how to make their pages accessible for all audiences, including people with disabilities. Like most Guild activities, the AWARE Center is volunteer-run and depends on the support of our members to continue to provide helpful information. Some of our links are out of date; some of our articles are getting stale; the general design of the page may scream "1900s!" to some people. So we're asking for your help. If you would like to be part of the volunteer team to assist with the AWARE Center web site and activities, you could do any of the following: * Give some advice with the general look-and-feel/design of the site * Suggest new links and resources on the web * Check existing links to see if they are still current * Write new articles or tutorials for use on the site * Volunteer to maintain one or more sections of the AWARE Center site If you are interested, please write to me at aware@hwg.org and I will add you to the aware-team mailing list. Thanks in advance! http://www.awarecenter.org/ 2. Texts Available for Visually-Impaired HWG Students. (Kynn Bartlett, AWARE Center Director, aware@hwg.org) The Guild has been working with various publishers to acquire a source for electronic versions of the textbooks used in our HWG online courses, for our members with visual disabilities. We are pleased to announce that all books by O'Reilly are available in this format. For more information, please email Lenny Muellner at len@oreilly.com. In addition, XML by Example and Special Edition Using XHTML are available in either HTML or PDF format from the publisher. To order either of these texts, please send an email to Marci Dick at marcie.dick@pearsoned.com and include your name, address, phone number, ISBN and title. They have set these up to be purchased by credit card. Since emails are not a secure means to transmit this data, please ask Marcie to call you by telephone for your card information. We are working on additional titles available in this format and will announce them here as soon as we have the information. 3. April Town Hall Meeting & Annual Membership Meeting: Thursday, April 26th (Fred Barnett, Secretary, secretary@hwg.org) April's Town Hall meeting will also be this year's HWG Annual Membership Meeting. During the AMM, the Governing Board will make reports to the membership on HWG activities over the past year. We will then have a question and answer period for the membership. All members of the Governing Board are expected to attend, so please be sure to come for this special event. We hope to see you there! The details on the Annual Membership Meeting are: 26 April Annual Membership Meeting Date: Thursday, 26 April 2001 Time: 6:30 p.m. PST, 9:30 p.m. EST Server: HWG Interactive, http://interact.hwg.org/ IRC: irc.hwg.org, port 6667 Channel: #townhall Agenda: 1. Welcome and Introduction of GB Members: Frank Boumphrey 2. Overall State of the Guild: Frank Boumphrey 3. Treasurer's Report: Chris Higgs 4. Specific HWG activities: A. Online Classes: Gretchen Lowerison B. AWARE Center: Kynn Bartlett C. Mailing List Program: Chris Higgs D. W3C Activities: Marshall Jansen E. XML and Project Gutenberg: Carole Gay 7. Thanks to Retiring Members: Frank Boumphrey 8. End of planned schedule 9. Question and Answer session To connect, either go to the URL above and use the Java-based client available via the web, or use your favorite IRC client and join channel #townhall. 4. Upcoming Online Classes: Take an online class! (Gretchen Lowerison, Online Education Director, classes@hwg.org) Through a web-based interface, we offer a broad series of online classes designed to teach you the skills you need, in a way that fits your busy schedule. Our instructors are your fellow Guild members, chosen for their expertise in their field and their willingness to pass along their experience to you. Upcoming courses you can take during April and May include: MS Access April 23, 2001 - June 3, 2001 http://www.hwg.org/services/classes/ms201.1.html MS Access is designed to teach students how to create a database from scratch. The student should already know how to run programs on their computer and how to use HTML. This course is for those students who want to create databases and learn to publish those databases to the WWW. It shows the importance of a good DBMS. Introduction to XML http://www.hwg.org/services/classes/x101.12.html April 23, 2001 - June 3, 2001 XML has been referred to as the new ASCII of the computer world. In a short space of time it has outgrown its nascent purpose of being a means to fix 'broken' HTML and help the web expand, and has become the language of choice for most new major standards and projects. This course is designed to give students a thorough grasp of the basics of XML and will also hopefully excite them enough to learn more about this powerful new concept. Introduction to HTML 4.0 April 23, 2001 - June 3, 2001 http://www.hwg.org/services/classes/h101.28.html Designed for the student with little to no working knowledge of creating HTML files "by hand." If you're looking to learn HTML from scratch or move beyond using a WYSIWYG (what you see is what you get) editing tool, this is the class for you. Beginning PHP April 30, 2001 - June 10, 2001 http://www.hwg.org/services/classes/p171.1.html PHP is a server side, embedded scripting language ideal for web development, database interaction and deployment of dynamic web pages/sites. PHP has enjoyed meteoritic growth in the last two years. January 2001 statistics published by Netcraft show 5.8 Million domains running PHP world wide. Sites that Sizzle: Web Animation with Macromedia Flash 4/5 April 30, 2001 - June 10, 2001 http://www.hwg.org/services/classes/a231.6.html With the help of Katherine Ulrich's book entitled Flash 4 for Windows and Macintosh or Flash 5 for Windows and Macintosh (depending on which version of Flash you are using): visual quickstart guide; weekly lessons, visits to sites that exemplify current the current flash topics, we will be covering techniques to create what is most enjoyed throughout the web: FLASH animated web sites. Creating Web Graphics with Paint Shop Pro April 30, 2001 - June 10, 2001 http://www.hwg.org/services/classes/g201.12.html Most web site developers use graphics to enhance their pages. For many, this means that you must rely on previously created graphics that you download from royalty free sites. But there is another alternative - create your own! Paint Shop Pro is a popular and powerful image editing application that allows you to create and modify graphics for your web pages and other documents. Introduction to Cascading Style Sheets April 30, 2001 - June 10, 2001, 2001 http://www.hwg.org/services/classes/h151.17.html Cascading Style Sheets have become an important component of new W3C recommendations. HTML 4.0 Strict relies on Style Sheets for all stylistic presentation, the Web Accessibility Initiative makes use of CSS for improving access for the disabled, and new work on HTML and XML will continue to make heavy use of CSS for the future. Introduction to SQL May 7, 2001 - June 17, 2001 http://www.hwg.org/services/classes/ms301.1.html Learn the basics from a simple SQL statement to more complex 3-table join. Inserts, updates, deletes, inner joins and outer joins are covered in this course. Business Writing Basics May 7, 2001 - July 1, 2001, 2001 http://www.hwg.org/services/classes/b101.13.html In the perfect world, Web developers have the support of other specialists when building sites -- copywriters, graphic designers, network administrators, and so on. In the real world, we all know this rarely happens. Often, you'll get saddled with creating the whole site, including writing the text content of the pages. This course will help you feel more comfortable with that task. Advanced Web Writing May 7, 2001 - July 1, 2001, 2001 http://www.hwg.org/services/classes/b201.4.html In this course, students will work intensively on the copy for a web project and get the feedback of fellow students and the instructor. We will review subjective and objective tools for identifying and analyzing the audience for a web site. We'll compare and contrast the advice experts give on writing text for the web, along with a variety of web style guides available. FrontPage 2000 May 7, 2001- June 17, 2001 http://www.hwg.org/services/classes/a141.2.html Microsoft FrontPage 2000 is designed for the student who already has some basic knowledge of the HTML tags used to create Web pages and would like to learn a rather quick and straight-forward way to develop and manage Web pages. The course is taught by an Industry-experienced teacher who uses FrontPage on a daily basis. The emphasis will be on practical uses rather than theory. Macromedia Flash Wizardry: A Masters Course May 14, 2001 - June 24, 2001 http://www.hwg.org/services/classes/a222.6.html With Russell Chun's "Flash 5 Advanced for Windows and MacIntosh" as a reference book, weekly lessons, visits to showcase sites that exemplify lesson topics and comments student assignments, we will be diving deep into the lesser known aspects of Flash! Advanced Perl Programming May 21, 2001 - July 1, 2001 http://www.hwg.org/services/classes/p201.1.html This course will cover intermediate and advanced Perl programming concepts, including: CDS (complex data structures) Named parameters Modules DBI (databases) Date and time mod_perl (Apache Perl module) Scope (Variable scoping) OO (object oriented programming) Images (GD, ImageMagik) Other topics based on student interest. Photoshop Level 1 May 21, 2001 - July 1, 2001 http://www.hwg.org/services/classes/g301.2.html Photoshop 6.0 and ImageReady 3.0 software package is the industry standard program for creating web graphics and for image manipulation. This course is designed for graphic designers, web designers, digital artists and photographers with little or no working knowledge of creating or modifying photographs and graphics for the web or print. Introduction to Programming Concepts May 21, 2001 - July 1, 2001 http://www.hwg.org/services/classes/p010.6.html This course is suggested for students with no programming background, or those who would like a more formal introduction to the concepts behind most programming languages. This class is an introduction to the fundamental syntax and logic of programming. Students will learn how to establish a script, and work with variables, conditional statements, loops and arrays. The fundamental logic of program flow and design will also be discussed. Creating Spread Sheets with Excel May 28, 2001 - July 8, 2001 http://www.hwg.org/services/classes/c101.1.html Microsoft Excel is Windows answer to the spreadsheet. Gone are the days of paper ledgers and hand calculations. Excel allows you to set up a digital ledger and enter data directly into your computer. Once the data has been inputted, you are able to perform a variety of calculations to provide you with the information that you require. Get more information at: http://www.hwg.org/services/classes/ COURSE FEES Course fees are based on membership level; Full members receive a discounted tuition price, while Trial members pay the standard price. Full membership is only $40 per year, so upgrade your membership before registering, and save money! Payments may be made online via secure transaction; all figures are in U.S. funds. A certificate of completion is available for an additional $5; the request needs to be made at the time of registration. A certificate can be requested after class is completed for $10. Textbooks (when required) are separate and may be purchased through the Guild's online bookstore, The Bookmark. Books should be purchased before the first week of class! In addition, students should have regular access to the web and the ability to post completed assignments on a public (non-Intranet) web server. 5. Why Did I Get This Email? And Other HWG-News FAQs (HWG-News Newsletter Editor, editor@hwg.org) This newsletter was edited by Kef Moulton . Some questions you may be asking: Q: Why did I get this mail? A: You received this newsletter because you are a member of the HTML Writers Guild. This message came from HWG-News, the Guild's mandatory mailing list for all members. If you need more information about HWG-News, please see the List Charter at: http://www.hwg.org/lists/hwg-news/index.html Q. Why doesn't this newsletter talk about web design or HTML more? A. The newsletter is the Guild's administrative bulletin to the membership; beyond the HWG News Tips, we don't include specific information on web creation. If you are interested in the topics of Web design and HTML, then you might want to subscribe to some of our discussion lists devoted to those topics. More information on the Guild's offering of discussion lists can be found at: http://www.hwg.org/lists/mailinglists.html Q. How can I find out more about Guild activities? A. The Guild has set up a one-way announcement list, HWG-Announce, that carries bulletins of day-to-day Guild business. For details on how to subscribe, please see: http://www.hwg.org/lists/hwg-announce/ Q: How do I unsubscribe from HWG-News? A: Since this is a required list in order to maintain your Guild membership, unsubscribing is the same as resigning from the HTML Writers Guild. If you have your Member ID and password, to resign your membership in the Guild and to unsubscribe to HWG-News, visit: http://www.hwg.org/member/resign.html Fill in the pertinent information, and submit it. If you don't have a Member ID, or have forgotten your password, send mail to: mailto:lost-password@hwg.org with a Subject of: Resign membership. In the body of the message, provide the following information: * Your email address(es) * Your member ID if you have one. * The list of discussion lists you are on. Please remember that unsubscribing to HWG-News automatically resigns you from the Guild. If you have problems with unsubscribing, please contact the password support team for help. Q: How do I change my email address for Guild mailings? A: Full members can update their membership profile at any time by going to this page: http://www.hwg.org/member/profile.html. If you don't know your password, contact the password support team for help. Trial members can send email to to change their email address. Q: Can my company advertise in the Guild's newsletter? A: Yes; the Guild is offering sponsorship opportunities in HWG-News on a limited basis. If you are interested in advertising your web related product or service here, please send email to advertising@hwg.org or call (334) 928-4542. Discounts are available to Guild Business and Corporate members, as well as for multiple placements. The Guild's newsletter reaches over 124,000 web authors worldwide each month. (Note: The Guild does not make our member database available for third party use. We have a strong privacy policy and will not release our members' personal information; our mailing list is not for sale. Any questions regarding the Guild's advertising or privacy policies can be directed to advertising@hwg.org.) Q: What if I want to comment on this newsletter? A: The HWG-News Mailing List is a "Read-Only" list -- please do not try to reply to this message directly. If you wish to contact the editor of this newsletter, you may do so by sending email to editor@hwg.org. Each article begins with the contact information for the author as well. Copyright 2001, HTML Writers Guild, Inc., All Rights Reserved. Published twice monthly via email and WWW.