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Introduction

This is version two of Gila, a revision of the original design I submitted to OSWD in February 2003. Following is a summary of the major differences between this version and the original.

Gila was inspired by the homepage of ActiveState, an open-source application development company. The name Gila is a play on the word Komodo, the name of one of ActiveState’s products which is based on the Mozilla project.

This template is marked up in XHTML 1.0 Strict and styled with CSS, allowing for greater compatibility and transformability. The design does not use any tables (unlike the design’s inspiration) resulting in greater design flexibility and cleaner code.

I hope you find this revision to your liking. You are free to use this design for any purpose you wish — personal, commercial or otherwise — without any obligation. If you publish a web site that’s based on this template, please email me your site’s URI.

Improved Cross-browser Compatibility

I did not test version one of Gila in Opera before submitting it to OSWD. As a result, the original does not render properly in that browser. In contrast, this version of Gila has been fully tested in Opera (7.01), Gecko (Mozilla 1.3) and Internet Explorer (6.0) for consistent rendering.

This means that people using standards-compliant browsers will see the same format and layout of your page.

Improved Accessibility

This version of Gila has improved accessibility features for people with impaired vision. The template tentatively conforms to the WCAG double A rating and § 508 guidelines for web content accessibility. The relative simplicity of the template’s underlying markup ensures that your page can be easily transformed for rendering in aural, tactile (braille) and other non-visual user agents.

Additionally, the majority of document metrics (widths, lengths and spacings) are font-size relative. This means that a user can increase the default font size of your page (using their browser) without compromising it’s layout.