| Contacts | Disclaimers | Site History | Standards/Accessibility |
Copyright © 1995-2008
University of Kentucky
Center for Applied Energy Research (CAER)
All Rights Reserved. Do not duplicate or mirror this
site.
Unless otherwise noted, all materials including but not limited to text, photos*, graphics*, video, audio as well as the entire contents of the CAER website are copyrighted as a collective work and are protected by United States and international copyright and trademark laws. The University of Kentucky's Center for Applied Energy Research (CAER) shall remain the sole and exclusive owner of all rights, title and interest in and to all specifically copyrighted information created and posted for inclusion on this website.
You may download or print material from this site for personal or educational, non-commercial use only, provided all copyright and other proprietary notices are kept intact at all times and that attribution, including the URL and CAER website name, are clearly noted. Use of any CAER website materials beyond the uses stated above must have prior written permission. Please contact Alice Marksberry for permission - Email.
Reciprocal links from industry, education, government and other (appropriate content) sites, to and from this website are encouraged and welcomed provided the content is presented in such a way that there is no confusion as to the source of the materials. All copyright notices, author and website attributions should be left intact. CAER website materials framed via another organization's framesets are not permitted.
Disclaimer for External Links:
Warning: Some web sites to which these materials provide links for the convenience of users are not managed by the University of Kentucky nor CAER. The University nor CAER take no responsibility for the content of those sites.
Privacy Notice: This site is programmed to collect information about individuals who visit it. Information about your account, such as your address, the pages that you view, and the links that you select, may be collected and stored for future statistical and administrative use. The information is used only as a source of anonymous statistical information and is not shared with anyone beyond the support staff to this website. By proceeding further in this site, you are granting permission for the collection of this information.
Additional information may be found here regarding the University of Kentucky's Policy Governing Creation and Use of World-Wide Web Materials.
Disclaimer of Liability and Warranties: The University of Kentucky, Center for Applied Energy Research nor any of its employees shall be held liable for any improper or incorrect use of the information contained within the CAER website and assumes no responsibility for any person's use of the information.
Notice: Although every effort is made to ensure that material found on the CAER website (http://www.caer.uky.edu) is accurate and up-to-date, it is provided for the convenience of the user and is provided "as is" and without warranties of any kind either express or implied. The content on this website may be changed or updated without notice; these changes may or may not be incorporated in any new version of the website. The CAER does not warrant or make any representations regarding the use or results of the use of the materials in this website in terms of its correctness, accuracy, timeliness, reliability, legality or otherwise. The CAER cannot accept any liability for any error, omission or failure to update such information. CAER does not warrant that the functions contained in the website materials will be uninterrupted or error-free, that defects will be corrected, or that this site or server makes it available, are free of viruses or other harmful components. The documents and related graphics published on this server could contain technical inaccuracies or typographical errors. Changes are periodically added to the information herein. Any opinions, statements or other content expressed or made available by information providers, users, or others, are those of the respective author(s) or distributor(s) and do not necessarily state or reflect those of the CAER and shall not constitute or imply endorsement or recommendation for advertising or product endorsement purposes. If you find any errors or omissions, we will make every effort to correct errors brought to our attention. We encourage you to report them to our web work staff.
Security Notice: Unauthorized attempts to defeat or circumvent security measures, use of the server and/or network system for uses other than those intended (such as denial of service to authorized users; unauthorized access to documents not listed on server menus; obtainment, alteration, damage or destruction of files/information) or to otherwise interfere with the system or its operation is strictly prohibited. Users that attempt to gain unauthorized access will be reported to the proper authorities and are subject to pertinent criminal and civil penalties.
This Web Site is maintained by:
The CAER Web Committee endeavors to make its web site accessible to the widest possible audience. We sought to optimize and validate for XHTML 1.0 and CSS 2.0 specifications as recommended by the World Wide Web Consortium. This site strives to also comply with the recommendations of the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0. For any problems or questions about this Web site or if particular needs might not covered by the guidelines, please refer to a CAER Web Contact.
Many current and future technologies depend on these web standards in order to operate. This means that you will receive a better web experience that uses the latest technology to bring you better web pages in less time.
"Web standards are created by the World Wide Web Consortium. Standards compliance makes it easier for people with special needs to use the Web. Blind people may have their computer read Web pages to them. People with poor eyesight may have pages rearranged and magnified for easier reading. And people using hand-held devices can browse the Web just as easily as those using high-end workstations. There are also many reasons for developers to be concerned with Web standards. Search engines can do a better job of indexing sites, for example. Using browser-specific code often doubles or triples the work to create Web pages, and leaves a lot to be desired when new media are introduced. This situation will only get worse without the sound direction of Web standards." (Reference from the Webstandards.org website: http://archive.webstandards.org/edu_faq.html) - Current FAQ list: http://www.webstandards.org/learn/faq/
"The most important thing to understand in terms of making a site accessible is that people use the Web in very different ways. A site should therefore present information in a way that people can access it regardless of what kind of hardware or software they are using, and regardless of how they navigate through a site. Web designers cannot assume that everyone uses the same kinds of devices the same way." (Quote from W3C website, Fact Sheet for "Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0": http://www.w3.org/1999/05/WCAG-REC-fact)
Copyright © 1995-2009
Center for Applied Energy Research
University of Kentucky -
Equal Opportunity University
All Rights Reserved. Do not duplicate or mirror this site