Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror

Submission + - Albatrosses Outfitted With GPS Trackers Detect Illegal Fishing Vessels (smithsonianmag.com)

schwit1 writes: Out here, surveillance often relies on something of an honor system, wherein vessels voluntarily report their presence through an automatic identification system (AIS) that can easily be switched off. “If any boats cuts off its AIS, nobody knows where the boat is,” Weimerskirch says.

Over the course of six months, the team’s army of albatrosses surveyed over 20 million square miles of sea. Whenever the birds came within three or so miles of a boat, their trackers logged its coordinates, then beamed them via satellite to an online database that officials could access and cross-check with AIS data. Of the 353 fishing vessels detected, a whopping 28 percent had their AIS switched off—a finding that caught Weimerskirch totally off guard. “No one thought it would be so high,” he says.

The number of covert ships was especially high in international waters, where about 37 percent of vessels operated AIS-free. Closer to the shore, in regions where individual countries have exclusive economic rights, things were more variable: While all the fish-laden boats detected around the Australian territory of Heard Island kept their AIS on, none of those lurking off the shores of South Africa’s Prince Edward Islands did. These differences seem to reflect how regularly coastal states survey their shores, Weimerskirch says.

Comment This is how it sounds when you use JAWS (Score 2, Informative) 663

I decided to run the computerworld article through JAWS (A Windows-based screen reader) and their site seems a good example of why it's so frustrating. (JAWS has a 40 minute mode which web people can use to test their designs, I find it very useful).

Here is what you hear:

"Link Graphic Click here to find out more, Link Graphic Click here to find out more, Link Graphic Click here to find out more, Link Graphic Click here to find out more." Then you get the top images, which are well described, then you have a Jump To section, again, not too bad, and the search is clear.

Then you're thrown into the navigation without any kind of skip link and no access keys. Then you get ads to download MS Search Server and an Ebook, Network Scanner, Virtualisation something. Then a Table to sign up for newsletters, then print edition. THEN you reach the content.

Admitedly you can use headings to skip to content, which is a bonus, but I've not seen a huge number of sites that use headings correctly.

You get the Heading, Sub Heading, then the comments, recommended and share links, then the Comments/Related box to the left of the article. Then the Zone advert THEN you get to the content of the article. The quote isn't obvious, there's a message for me to get the latest flash player, then the remainder of the article.

After this are the page links. "Link 2, Link 3, Link Next Right double angle bracket"

It should be noted that I am not a very competent screen reader user and that experienced users can speed this process up and if you have headings (Which computerworld do) you can skip to H1 and save a lot of time, but to be honest their site could do with fixing, just like the majority of ones I see (myself included sometimes, I'm still learning too).

Slashdot Top Deals

Time is an illusion perpetrated by the manufacturers of space.

Working...