The guidelines as second nature for designers

Published: 30 May 1999 y., Sunday
There are at least 14 ways to make information on the Web more accessible to people with disabilities. The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), based in Cambridge, Mass., recently released a list of suggested guidelines designed to make it easier for people who are blind, deaf, or learning disabled to access information on the Web. The guidelines provide priority levels for adoption as well as conformance levels to use as a reference. The guidelines are published on the Web. Suggestions include using text to describe images, and using captions and transcripts for audio and video. Technical devices such as scripts, applets, and plug-ins should be accompanied by alternative content in case active features are inaccessible or unsupported. 10 percent to 20 percent of the population has a disability that would influence how they access information on the Internet. W3C accessibility initiative, a group composed of industry, disabled organizations, research centers, and government agencies, would like the guidelines to become second nature for designers, before the technology makes it too complicated to design for broad accessibility. The Center for Applied Special Technology has a tool, "Bobby," that can be used to perform an automated online test, such as this test of the TechWeb site. A website designer said the guidelines and the priority lists, should help designers open the Web up to more people.
Šaltinis: TechWeb
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Gemalto Teams Up with Venezuelan Bankcard Market Leaders to Accelerate EMV Migration

Gemalto teaming up with two banking technology leaders to help banks in Venezuela move to a new, high-tech smart credit card that will better protect their customers from fraud and identity theft. more »

Thanks to the new Bull supercomputer for the Jülich Research Center

The new Bull HPC-FF1 supercomputer with 100 Teraflops-capacity will host applications for the European Union Fusion community. more »

Gemalto reports fourth quarter and full year 2008 revenue

Gemalto, the world leader in digital security today announced its revenue for the full year and fourth quarter of 2008. more »

Wincor World 2009: keen interest in combined solution portfolio

Wincor World 2009, which was held in Paderborn from January 20 to 22, has once more proven to be the place where experts from retail banking and retailers gather, even in times of economic crisis. more »

Motorola Honored with Prestigious iF Product Design Award

Motorola Inc. announced it has been recognized with one of the world’s foremost industrial design honors, an iF product design award. more »

Parliament online this week: the key issues

The EU’s antiterrorism coordinator, Gilles de Kerchove, and Interpol representatives, will brief MEPs on Thursday about progress in combating terrorism. more »

Tesco, Poland's leading retail enterprise, awards service contract to Wincor Nixdorf

The Tesco retail chain in Poland has chosen Wincor Nixdorf to maintain its 4,600-strong estate of POS systems and servers from different vendors. more »

Gemalto Provides Kingdom of Bahrain with Additional One Million New-Generation e-ID Cards

Gemalto, the world leader in digital security, announces it will deliver an additional one million of its latest generation electronic ID cards for citizens and residents of the Kingdom of Bahrain. more »

China's Largest CAD/CAM Software Developer Selects Aladdin HASP SRM

CAXA increases sales and reduces costs with Aladdin HASP SRM. more »

OPT chooses Bull to launch innovative telecommunications services

Bull extends the deployment of Comptel Dynamic OSS, at the heart of the telco's information systems. more »