Kim Siever’s Blog

Am I a ColdFusion guru now?

By Kim Siever, 17 Nov 06

I received a surprise email today from a developer working on ColdFusion 8. He is working on some new cool features, which I will keep private. He talked to CF guru Ben Forta regarding the new feature and Ben referred him to me! Ben Forta recommended me! Me!

This developer sent me a draft of the new features and asked for my feedback. What a very surreal experience.

My head is still shaking.

Managing Editor

By Kim Siever, 15 Nov 06

At the U of L, there is a group of us who get together once a month to discuss issues and projects related to web design. I have not contributed much lately, but I always enjoy the company. Anyhow, since we changed our name from Web Club to Web Forum (another post in itself I am sure), I guess I can discuss it publicly.

One of the things we discussed yesterday was starting a blog with regularly published articles. In truth, it sounds more like a webzine. either way, the Web Unit Manager decided there needs to be some editorial control and I was nominated to be the managing editor.

It does pay off to be overly critical and anal about grammar usage. It’s all about branding.

Anyhow, it should be interesting. The last time I had a position of any similarity was back in grade eight when I was assistant editor on the school newspaper. My editorial knowledge has certainly improved since then.

I guess it also means if everyone thinks the publication is crap, I take the heat.

Should be fun.

Addressing Standards

By Kim Siever, 3 Nov 06

I see a lot of mail. And it amazes me how everyone seems to follow his/her own addressing conventions when writing out a postal address. It is even more amazing given that (at least) Canada and the USA have postal addressing standards.

For example, in Canada, the Canada Postal Guide has these guidelines:

  • Addresses should be written in upper case; however, mailers may wish to use lower case due to individual preference or other considerations.
  • Postal codes should be printed in upper case with the first three elements separated from the last three by one space (no hyphens). If the postal code is not formatted in this manner, the mail may be delayed.
  • The municipality, province or territory, and postal code should always appear on the same line. There should be one space between the municipality, province or territory and two spaces between the province or territory and postal code.
  • Characters in the address block should not be underlined.
  • Punctuation should not be used unless it is part of a proper name, (ST. JOHN’S). However, mailers may wish to use punctuation due to individual preference or other considerations.
  • Accents may be used as they are an integral part of language but they are not considered to be punctuation.
  • The # symbol should never be used, nor the French equivalent no as part of the address.
  • All lines of an address should be formatted with a uniform left margin and should be less than 40 characters per line, excluding spaces.
  • Space between address lines should be at least 0.5 mm but no more than one blank line between lines of addressing.
  • All characters should be larger than 2 mm and smaller than 5 mm from the top to bottom (10 to 12-point). Return addresses may use smaller characters and should not be larger than the destination address.
  • Only non-proportional fonts (characters which occupy the same width) should be used. The following are examples of acceptable fonts: OCR B, Letter Gothic, Elite, Lotus Line-Draw, MS Line Draw, Courier, Courier New, Pica and Copy Pica.
  • Return addresses should be formatted in the same fashion as the destination address, and located in the top-left corner of the mail piece, clearly separated from the destination address, or on the back of the mail piece at the top. The return address is mandatory on Priority Courier, Xpresspost, Expedited Parcel and Regular Parcel items.

The USPS has similar guidelines:

  • Print or type your address in the upper left corner on the front of the envelope.
  • Use a stamp, postage meter or PC Postage to affix the correct amount. Use our online Calculator to calculate postage rates.
  • Print clearly the delivery address parallel to the longest side of the package. Do not use commas or periods.

Maybe it’s related to why so few websites use W3C standards.

As some examples, for the record, here is how I would write two former addresses of mine a numebred street and a named street:

KIM SIEVER
4-12991 100 AV
SURREY BC V3T 1G9
KIM SIEVER
69 MCGILL BLVD W
LETHBRIDGE AB T1K 3V7