Making the service assessment process easier and more consistent
...something we’re set up to provide or support. Working in the open and sharing source code, however, means any other department can take the code, set it up themselves and...
...something we’re set up to provide or support. Working in the open and sharing source code, however, means any other department can take the code, set it up themselves and...
...to control a computer using voice commands. Jane demonstrated how Dragon struggled with buttons on a DfE service and the BBC homepage because they weren't coded correctly. Highlighting a gap...
...been racially diverse. We're now doing user research with our panel members who identify as belonging to an ethnic minority. Their views, feedback and insight on what we can do...
...continually review the service. We carried out automated accessibility testing – we do this every time we release new code or features. We run manual accessibility testing with the Disability...
...Civil Service pay grades and salary structure map across to those in other sectors. We explained that it's ok to use notes in your interview – if candidates feel comfortable,...
...- these included tunnel vision, macular degeneration and cataracts. The glasses help the team test features that these users might find difficult to see. As well as visual impairments, the...
...you prefer using spreadsheets, Lucid boards, a plain document, Figma, Jira, or even including it as a page on the code prototype, the key is to select a method that...
...for example, Tech Code of Practice (TCoP), which support service delivery. The scope of our standard could be a minimal viable standard to support raising the quality of services. Scoped...
Recent Comments