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Tools, wizards, articles and tutorials on Web Accessibility for the conscientious web developer

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Archive for January, 2007

Thursday, January 25th, 2007

Mobile access - the next big accessibility barrier?

Last week I attended a 1-day conference hosted at BT’s head office in London entitled Extending Horizons - Accessibility to Next Generation Networks. It was one of those conferences that gets bandied about by email at work along the lines of ’so-and-so might want to go to that’. So-and-so was me, this time! I had little in the way of expectations, to be honest, knowing very little about the COST219ter initiative which this conference was tied in with. After the day’s events I’m still not entirely clear, as it seemed to be, to some extent, a lot of ‘preaching to the converted’. Maybe I got this wrong, but I felt that many of the audience knew a fair amount about this initiative and that my interest in web accessibility was not a big item on the agenda.

Regardless, I got a free book!

OK, so it’s a very academic book and not one that you’d want to read while waiting for a flight, perhaps, but there are some useful sections in there that readers of this site may find useful - a way of jumping outside the web accessibility bubble and seeing some of the bigger picture, specifically the issues that may face users with so much emerging mobile and wireless technology.

The book is available in hard copy (by request in writing) or you can download PDF or HTML formats of the individual chapters.

Note to the conference organisers

  • If you are providing name badges, please please include the company or organisation name that the delegate is representing; a logo is also a great addition, where possible.
  • Allow time for speakers to answer questions. If people over run slightly, be a little flexible and allow this to eat in to coffee time or lunch time, or be more strict with speakers’ timing
  • Announce where speakers’ slides are going to be posted after the event. Many slides were zipped past, some of it content heavy and impossible to make notes about, but none of the speakers said “‘ll post my slides in x location”

Wednesday, January 17th, 2007

@Media 2007 - Speakers and registration details announced

The fine conference that is @Media once again takes place this year - or should that be ‘thrice again’? The teaser site has been up for a while but today we get to see the proper site including more information about the speakers for this year’s events which take place in San Francisco, Hong Kong and London

Damn, I wish I was going to @media 2007If you want to support the event with a link, then you can get a choice of linkybuttons from the appropriate page (e.g. here are buttons for Europe)

Site Navigation

Outside reading

Jeremy Keith does an excellent write-up of the Accessibility 2.0 conference (which I was unable to attend)
Sharepoint and Web Accessibility
Bruce Lawson describes the disparity between Sharepoint/MOSS developed web sites and the level of accessiblity that the tool offers to users (summary - it really is not good!)
How does a screen reader user really hear your web site?
Interesting post on Beast Blog about how a screen reader user - a real one! Not one of those fake web developer tester types! - uses the tool to read a web page. A few surprises were waiting in store for author Mike Cherim.
Web Accessibility Toolbar now available in simplified Chinese
The Web Accessibility Tools Consortium (WAT-C) release a simplified Chinese version of the Web Accessibility Toolbar.
Web 2.0 vs Web Accessibility
1-day seminar in London, 25th April, brings together experts in the field to discuss/demonstrate the accessibility issues faced by web 2.0.
Leading accessibility technologists form new alliance to fix problems
The Accessibility Interoperability Alliance (AIA), comprising (among others) Adobe, HP, Microsoft, Novell, and from the assistive tech industry Dolphin, GW Micro and HiSoftware forms to work together "to create and harmonize standards for accessible techn
Fieldsets, legends and screen readers
An excellent run-down of how fieldsets and legends can improve accessibility and how the various screen readers cope with this useful markup.
CAPTCHAs explained - WacBlog
Another really good post on the RNIB\'s Web Access Centre blog explaining captchas, why they\'re bad for accessibility and what the alternatives may be.
Making WCAG easier to read
Derek Featherstone has created some fancy style sheets to make reading WCAG documents a little easier on the eye.
Top Tips for the title attribute
Ann McMeekin provides a set of simple tips regarding when - or rather when not to - use the title attribute. \'Cos sometimes you can try *too much* to be helpful
California court tilts towards mandating web accessibility
Outlaw.com reports (on behalf of The Register) on the Target California class action lawsuit, digging a little deeper into what Target have been doing of late to address matters.
Screen Readers and display:none
Juicy Studio, aka Gez Lemon, investigate some quirks whereby screen readers announce content that they should not be. Perhaps this could be used for good rather than evil?
Google Developer Podcast: The status of accessibility on the Web
An interview with Google research scientist TV Rahman (and Hubbell, his seeing-eye dog!). Lots of talk about CAPTCHAs and accessibility, but no sign of a transcript for this interview as yet.
Transcript of Shawn Henry's talk from Jun 5th 2007 in London on RNIB's Web Access Centre Blog
Virtual worlds open up to blind
"Online virtual worlds could soon be accessible to blind people thanks to research by students at IBM in Ireland" states BBC News

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