Product category:
Document and workflow management software
News Release from: SiteMorse Technologies | Subject: SiteMorse PDF checker
Edited by the Manufacturingtalk Editorial
Team on 19 January 2007
Test service solves PDF accessibility
issues
SiteMorse has officially launched a new and low-cost test service for checking Adobe PDF files
Over seventy per cent of PDF documents tested on websites belonging to FTSE 100 enterprises failed to be fully accessible, according to a survey conducted in December 2006 by automated website testing company SiteMorse To address this important issue - one that products used to create PDFs cannot do - SiteMorse has officially launched a new and low-cost test service for checking Adobe PDF files
This article was originally published on Manufacturingtalk on 21 Jul 2008 at 8.00am (UK)
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The new facility is an integrated part of the company's existing and comprehensive service that enables websites to be tested and benchmarked for availability, usability and compliance with mandatory, corporate and industry standards.
Based on web standards available from Adobe, SiteMorse claims the new testing service is the first of its type in the world to successfully check accessibility to PDFs.
"Poor quality PDFs are a very important issue, one that is not confined to the private sector," said Gareth Evans, marketing director of SiteMorse.
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"When we acted on our own initiative and surveyed UK Central Government websites in December 2006, using the new service, nearly ninety per cent of PDF's we examined had problems.
Local Government didn't fare much better; seventy-nine per cent failed our test.
"The real issue is that organisations - and their suppliers - are not testing new and existing PDFs on their sites regularly and rigorously enough.
In turn, their audiences are being frustrated and denied access to information or connections they need".
The PDF is ubiquitous and the world relies on this type of document, said Evans, from the mandatory annual report to simple directions on how to find somewhere: "The tools used for creating PDFs cannot perform the tests.
Now, with this new and world beating testing service, there is no excuse for poor performance".
SiteMorse's new service will speedily and efficiently examine the contents of a PDF file and is designed to perform up to twenty-eight tests.
These tests identify problems for correction, so that once fixed users may gain full access to the information contained in the file.
Common failings revealed by the service include broken or incorrect links to other websites, e-mail addresses that are not formatted correctly or no longer in use, or missing images and fonts.
Results from a test are presented to the user of the service in the form of an executive summary and a detailed technical report.
It lists failures, enabling the right action to be taken to eliminate the problem.
For example, the SiteMorse test detects many different kinds of malfunction with embedded hyperlinks.
It will also contact mail servers to verify that addresses provided in 'mailto:' links are correct and functional.
For people affected by physical disabilities another function of the new service helps improve access to PDF files for this type of user.
The format of the file itself provides features that enable document authors to ensure the PDF is accessible to all users, including those who are disabled: it includes 'tags' within the file indicating the logical document structure and reading order.
SiteMorse's service singles out PDF files that lack these tags.
The file may then be examined in detail for accessibility compliance, enabling appropriate corrective action to be taken.
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