Quick points on accessibilty
By Chris on Sep 15, 2006 | In Development & Design, CSS, Standards, Accessibility, Usability | Send feedback »
In a recent post, Bruce Lawson, a member of the Accessibility Task Force and notable funny-guy, gives the following pointers on accessibility:
- Accessibility is not text-only or a separate “cripples-only” site
- Disability is more than blindness
- Accessibility is not an exercise in political correctness; there are demonstrable, measurable advantages in usability for all
- Accessibility isn’t a purely technical matter; it’s to do with content as well (and is thus also the reponsibility of the non-techy people in the organisation who produce content).
He also points out Legal & General as an example of a corporate web site that is both fashionable and accessible.
In a wonderful display of irony, Bruce’s contribution to the CSS Zen Garden project (a project revolving around beautiful, usable and accessible web site design) had me laughing out loud with a call back to Geocities personal home pages circa 1996. In this case, ugly is only skin deep :)
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