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Update: new post layout and more!

Published: May 11, 2021
Last updated on May 24, 2021

In the previous post, I announced our name change. Besides the new name, you might have noticed a few other updates. Whether you have or not, let me just briefly mention the most significant ones.


New post layout

You might have noticed that the layout of our blog posts has changed quite considerably:

  • The table of contents section looks more refined and has a better division of content (listing references, tags, and comments separately from the main content).
  • The styling of large links in posts has been improved, so they now look more obviously like links rather than blue titles.
  • The social sharing icons at the bottom of posts are now in their own section, distinct from the post.
  • The references section has been upgraded, with fancier link hover effects, and the section is better distinguished from the main content.
  • The tags and related posts are now together in one section, and the tags are displayed a lot more prominently, to encourage exploring our content of related subjects.
  • The author’s description is displayed more prominently and with more spazaz. You gotta have spazaz! Oh, and the author name now links to their author profile, where you can find more of their posts.
  • And finally, the comments section is now looking a lot better. You now have fewer excuses not to comment. Let me know what other excuses you have to not comment, by leaving a comment in the upgraded comments section below.

For reference, below is a screenshot of the old blog post layout—the sections below the main blog post.

A screenshot of the old blog post layout.
The old blog post layout, the way it looked until May 2021.

In the screenshot below, you can see what it became. As you can see, the layout is better divided, more color is used for emphasis and visual impact, and I think the end result is a lot more clear and appealing.

A screenshot of the new blog post layout.

And below is an update that would be hard to notice without reference, but which definitely makes things look more clear: a more refined table of contents!

A screenshot comparing the old and new table of contents.
On the left side is the table of contents that was introduced in early 2021; on the right is the updated table of contents.


New illustrations

Some of the illustrations have been updated, such as Natalie’s character on the home page. Below is a screenshot of the old page, in case you would like to compare.

A screenshot of our home page as it appeared up to May 2021.

Below is the updated home page design, with Natalie’s new character, and cooler typography.

A screenshot of our home page as it appeared since the update in May 2021.

And have you seen the new artwork on the Team page?

The Embrace Autism team.


New comment features

We implemented various new commenting features, including:

  • Comment upvotes/downvotes — You can now like or dislike a comment. We might reconsider including downvotes though. What do you think?
  • Mentions — Similar to Twitter, you can now mention other people using their handle. I suspect this only works if you’ve registered an account on our website though. Either way, you can respond to me in the comments using @martin-silvertant.
  • Emoticons — You can now include emoticons in your comments!
  • User comment profiles — By hovering over someone’s avatar in the comments section, you can see various statistics and their latest activity on the website.
  • Badges — Based on your engagement on the website, you can achieve various badges.

Device optimization

We also spent more time optimizing the website for different devices and resolutions. Some layout issues were addressed, such as the Recommended next steps section at the end of our posts on psychometric tests, which went off-screen on mobile. And depending on the size of your screen, the main artwork of posts, as well as post titles, will appear larger—thus utilizing more of your screen estate if you have it. Can you imagine the possibilities of a 100″ screen? The sheer amount of autism information you could fit on that! We might optimize our website for that once it becomes commonplace.


Improved accessibility

And finally, we made a few accessibility improvements. We can do more, and we have more planned, but for now, we addressed two things:

  • We made the focus state of links more obvious, which will probably aid you when navigating links using the tab key, and will probably bring more comfort to our readers with lower vision.
  • We added a media query that minimizes all animations and link/hover effects on our website depending on the settings of your browser. So this will probably bring more comfort to our readers that experience issues with flashy imagery.

If you can help us make a WordPress-based website more accessible, we would love to hear from you!


A French-Canadian flag.

Multilingual

We were going to announce the exciting news that we have now gone multilingual, but we faced too many challenges and decided to bring the updated website live without multilingual support. We will try to get that working in our next big update. However, based on a request, we did translate the CAT-Q to Canadian French, so that French-speaking clinicians in our country can make use of this fantastic psychometric test. So even though you can’t yet switch between languages on our website,  you can access the CAT-Q in French here:

Le CAT-Q

And that’s it for now. Let us know what you think of the changes, or if you have suggestions on things we could implement.

This article
was written by:
martin-silvertant

Martin Silvertant is a co-founder of Embrace Autism, and lives up to his surname as a silver award-winning graphic designer. Besides running Embrace Autism and researching autism, he loves typography and practicing type design. He was diagnosed with autism at 25.

PS: Martin is trans, and as of 2021 she writes under her true name, Eva Silvertant.

Disclaimer

Although our content is generally well-researched
and substantiated, or based on personal experience,
note that it does not constitute medical advice.

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glow
glow
1 year ago

Hey,

nice article. i know the ccc and the speech from 32c3 is although at ¹ linking to that people do not have to use youtube as a intermediate (or secondary mirror) but have it directly from the source.

at the bottom of the site is also a bit of html to embed the video directly from media.ccc.de

1: https://media.ccc.de/v/32c3-7483-computational_meta-psychology

Anastasia Mellott
Anastasia Mellott
2 years ago

Gahhh.. that was such a satisfying read. And I can’t begin to describe how much I appreciate all of it. Solid summarization with applicable, appropriate and concise connections to life experiences/scenarios. And my gosh the way you wrapped it up with recognizing where you perhaps got off course or remaining questions you acknowledged, and went above and beyond being honest about behind the scenes work/effort/time/ resources, and bravely (and hopefully beneficially to your readers) vulnerably shared your headspace and limitations and healthy practice to catch yourself before crashing. So so good!

Martaine
Martaine
2 years ago

This article is so excellent. I will share it for sure.

Martin Silvertant
Admin
2 years ago
Reply to  Martaine

Ohh thank you so much!

Gina
Gina
3 years ago

I—like many other autistic people—am puzzled by the realization that people, in general, don’t seem all that concerned with truth.”

Boy this got me right in the feels. It’s something I’ve been really struggling with lately. And of course if you confront NT folks with this statement, most if not all of them will profess that they OF COURSE care about truth. But the actions don’t line up with this at all, to the point of (as you mention, I think) outright antagonism when truth is attempted. It’s very, very difficult to navigate for me, and always has been. (-.-)

Charles Rainey
Charles Rainey
3 years ago

I wouid agree with the idea that most neurotypical people value conformity to group ideas over commitment to absolute truth. But I would also extend the idea to include unconscious as well as conscious processing.

The is a view of the brain that it is a survival engine and not a truth detector. If, in the middle of a famine, everyone goes to the seashore to fish then some will die on the journey. But much of the group will survive. But if instead the group were told by its leaders that there was no famine, some would perceive that. Its just belt tightening. The people who died were simply unlucky or lazy.

Being part of a large group seems to give a statistical survival advantage over an individual trying to work out exactly what is going on. I am reminded of the famous experiment by Asch where participants ignored the evidence of their own eyes as to the length of various lines.

Heidi Dischinger
Heidi Dischinger
3 years ago

This is amazing. It explains why we are unable to tackle the big issues of our time: climate and ecological breakdown, inequality, exclusion of the ‘other’, religious and racial discrimination. All of it. Police brutality. I’m trying to wrap my head around how humans can reorganize their thinking like this. It’s like a parallel universe.

Martin Silvertant
Admin
3 years ago

I know!

Tanya
Tanya
3 years ago

“These are things that seem to be logical to me at this point in my life, and I try to give you the arguments to why they are plausible but don’t believe in them. Question them, challenge them, see if they work for you. I am not giving you any truth, I am just going to give you suitable encodings according to my current perspective”

~Joshua Bach

Leigh
Leigh
3 years ago

Fantastic!! 👌🏻👌🏻 I had been miserably thinking about how people take on opinions of those whose approval they value rather than truth, and wondering how they could live with that!? So thank you so much for this! It is a Godsend. I feel so much better!

Martin Silvertant
Admin
3 years ago
Reply to  Leigh

Oh that is wonderful to hear! I’m glad I shared this.

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