The following qualification table defines a group of requirements needed by a website to be within the scope of this AP and to be qualified to display the 5cq logo, all related to the website content type and quantity. A more detailed explanation can be found in the FAQs at the end of this page.
These requirements, even if they don't seem very restrictive, exclude a big portion of existing websites. We thank in advance those websites who use this logo with a link to www.alcazaren.info (optional). The qualification requirements are revised at minimum annually, so the compliance should be checked with the same periodicity.
5cq logo. The blue logo shown identifies a website as one that meets previous qualification table 5 requirements. There are 3 other graphic versions of 5cq logos that can be retrieved from the Graphics section.
To be considered candidate for the Alcazarén Award, the website needs to be within the scope of this AP, in particular, the requirements of the previous table (5cq Qualification Table) need to be met. In the award request form the candidate is asked for confirmation of these requirements.
It's not easy for a website to fulfill what was originally expected from it. If it does, it doesn't mean that an award is needed to reflect such a job well done. If you think that your website's content quality is above or beyond that of a good website, please, continue reading the rest of this AP sections and apply for our award.
It makes reference to pages of a certain size instead of simply writing "4 pages" (a page can be any size). "Standard" would be equivalent to "Letter", "Legal", "Exec" or "A4". "Letter" is well known in the United States, in Spain the same size is called "holandesa".
The A series (A0, A1,...), as well as the B and C series, is defined by the (International Standards Organization) ISO-216 and all those sizes have the following characteristic: the relation of the 2 sides is 1 to the square root of 2 (1.414...), the only relation (can be easily found with a mathematical equation) that, if a page is cut in 2, the 2 pieces keep maintaining the relation, and so on... If you are interested in this topic, see Marcus Khun article on this subject.
This AP doesn't know of any rule on this subject. Of the 5 requirements there are 3 with "does not", but also,...
...there is a 5cq logo, and as many other logos it represents a qualification or a validation. It is also a website pre-evaluation requirement, to be qualified. If disqualification is used, there would be no logo and a site needs to be non-disqualified to be evaluated. In summary, feel free to considerer the negations of the above 5 requisites so that the above table becomes a Disqualification Table ;))
Requirement 1 is a group of requirements, it could be broken down to around 10. Requirement 2 is similar to 1 but in a "link to" basis. You will find all these 2 requirements in most APs with some variations and split in different ways.
Requirements 3 and 4 are what this AP, in particular, doesn't accept, a common error, the "in construction" phrase, which has plagued the Internet for many years, and the proliferation of banners (not an error but a characteristic that should be limited) that is self explanatory. For less important errors or for other negative website characteristics, points will be deducted during the evaluation.
Requirement 5, contrary to 3 and 4, represents what this AP wants a website to be or contain, the more the better, and is in agreement with the AP purpose. To conclude a small clarification on the "non-commercial", it means, that a description of a product with a commercial intention is not considered part of the content being asked for, but commercial and non-commercial information can perfectly coexist in a website.
The languages that this AP evaluates are clearly defined in the AP Scope. There is a slight difference with the qualifications, if a website is not evaluated because of its language, even if the end result is the same the reason is totally different, the evaluators are the ones that do not qualify.
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(1). Last 5cq Qualification Table update: 2004-11-23.