We are slowly and steadily moving forward with the IETF website redesign project. Many of you rightly expressed concern about the fact that the way we recruited volunteers for this effort made it impossible for people in certain time zones to participate. I want to let you know that the next time we do something like this, we will collect names for a day or two and then randomly select a number of names from the pool of volunteers. The website redesign team will be getting together in the next couple of weeks for a kickoff conference call, and some of the initial actions of the team will include: 1) review of considerations / design principles, adding or revising as necessary 2) creation of a timeline for start and conclusion of the redesign project 3) creation of a process outline, such as: - create new site in parallel to existing site, using URL such as www4.ietf.org - get new site running off of datatracker, etc in parallel to ietf.org - announce site to community, for general feedback - refine site as appropriate - announce timeline that sites will exist in parallel, so that tools team and general community have ample warning to reconfigure bookmarks, tools etc to run off of new site - shutdown old site and move new site to ietf.org In the meantime, here at AMS we have developed the following to use as a foundation for this effort, though it may be revised when the website redesign team meets. Purpose of the IETF website: * To provide general information about the IETF to the public * To house the IETF's Internet-Drafts * To house the various tools used by the IETF community to further their goal to make the Internet work better. * To provide the IETF community with access to Working Group information * To provide the IETF community with access to IESG information - IESG statements - Appeals information * To archive and log various mailing lists, Jabber rooms, etc. used in IETF work Goals for website redesign: * Improve site navigation - Clear Site Map - Define what is available on the site - Help users find the information they want quickly - Make it easy for users to request additional information * Make it easy for a person who wants to become active in the IETF to find the information they need - "New to the IETF?" link posted on front page * Consistent layout and design of pages * Eliminate redundancy (i.e. avoid having the same information posted-- rather than linked--in multiple places) - When redundancy aids in speedy navigation, *links* can be placed in multiple locations to that information, but we should avoid posting the same *text* information in multiple places * Make pages clean and easy to read Considerations for redesign effort (design principles): * Web site should follow the W3C guidelines for user accessibility. Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 2.0: http://www.w3.org/TR/2008/CR-WCAG20-20080430/ * Web site should have stable URLS - Once information is posted, that same information can be obtained from the same URL over and over. * Users should be able to navigate the web site with images turned off in their browser. (All images should have ALT text describing the content.) * Pages should load as quickly as is reasonable; minimal graphics * The new site should not impede the IETF Community from running their own tools to scrape information from the site We will try to keep the community updated as we move along with this project but, as always, if you have any questions or concerns please feel free to contact me. Regards, Alexa ----------- Alexa Morris / Executive Director / IETF 48377 Fremont Blvd., Suite 117, Fremont, CA 94538 Phone: +1.510.492.4089 / Fax: +1.510.492.4001 Email: amorris@xxxxxxxx Managed by Association Management Solutions (AMS) Forum Management, Meeting and Event Planning www.amsl.com <http://www.amsl.com/> _______________________________________________ IETF mailing list IETF@xxxxxxxx https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ietf