Speak the Web
Last Thursday I popped along with a few fuse8
colleagues to Bar Room Bar for the Leeds leg of the
‘Speak the Web‘ tour.

I’ve been to a few conferency things over the past couple of years and more often than not they’ve been a let down, not in terms of presentations, but atmosphere.
Speak the Web nailed it.
A bar.
At night.
No pads and paper in sight.
Just a group of people getting together and listening to some good speakers talk shop.
They got the price right too. More often than not you pay over the odds for these things, but at £20, with a free pint (and an iPhone development book in the raffle) you simply can’t complain! Bargain…especially when work pay for it
First up was Stuart Smith, who talked mobile, and brushed over the current mobile landscape. I did find it odd that the likes of the Nokia Ovi store and the Android platform were completely missed from his talk, but Stu said he simply didn’t have time…fair do’s! All in all a decent enough talk, but didn’t really encourage any debate or conversation.
Next was Chris Mills from Opera, sporting some fetching MC Hammer pants and a corker of a beard. HTML5 was the order of the day, lots of examples of what possibilities lie ahead when browsers catch up. Decent enough fare.
Last up was Andy Clarke, talking about what he coins ‘hardboiled web design’. I’ve seen Andy a fair few times now and was lucky enough to attend one of his workshops in London last year, so I knew to expect. He didn’t disappoint. Again, it was a glimpse into the possibilities of a HTML5/CSS3 future with a few eye opening examples.
Andy also pushed his message of using progressive enhancement. Designing for the more competent browsers first then degrading for older browsers (who cares if they don’t get rounded corners…yeah?). Some of the guys in the audience were understandably a bit cynical about it, after all, IE6 still needs to be considered for most clients. It’s a a familiar frustration but I strongly agree with Andy that if anything is going to change, we as web designers need to push the boundaries and make the change happen! Little by little.
Now, I design websites, and also have a background in coding, so for people like me it’s perhaps easier to see the possibilities, and understand the pitfalls in designing for technologies such as HTML5. What became clear however, after talking to a few people present, was how some developers struggle with designers who have little knowledge of technical developments in HTML, and therefore can’t take advantage of it in their designs. It’s certainly difficult finding a decent designer who understands code, and vice versa.
That’s where the likes of Andy come in. They, with their gypsy-like life of the conference speaker, and apparent lack of corporate clients insistent on testing in every single browser until they look the same, can continue to experiment, to push, and try and change people’s attitudes.
I’ll be the one stood at the back nodding in agreement, and patiently awaiting the day when HTML5 and CSS3 are the norm.

