Latest Accessibility News on Accessify

Mobile Speak Pocket - PDA screenreader

Mobile Speak Pocket is a screen reader that provides you with access to all the functionality of the device, allowing you to discover the exciting world of Windows-based PDA’s and Smartphones. Thus Mobile Speak Pocket users can now enjoy the complete access to windows mobile mainstream devices like a sighted person at mainstream prices.

Mobile Speak Pocket is compatible with a variety of Pocket PCs and Smartphones. As Windows Mobile technology advances, the device can easily be upgraded.

Mobile Speak Pocket works with a variety of keyboards, braille devices available on the market. The user has the complete flexibility to chose a PDA or a Smartphone and add Mobile Speak Pocket to it. Users can chose between a large variety of languages and voices. We give our customers the choice of different high quality speech synthesizers for each language. Different voices or languages can be combined.

Looks interesting, though I haven’t got a device to test it on. See the Mobile Speak Pocket product page, as well as the other products from spanish developers Code Factory, and let us know if they’re any good.

Filed under: Accessibility
Comments Off Posted by Patrick H. Lauke on Friday, August 19, 2005

IBM to help increase Firefox accessibility

IBM today announced that it is contributing software to the Mozilla Foundation’s Firefox Web browser to make it easier for more users — including those with visual and motor impairments — to access and navigate the Web.

In addition to contributing code that will make it possible for Web pages to be automatically narrated or magnified, and to be better navigated with keystrokes rather than mouse clicks, IBM is contributing Dynamic Hypertext Markup Language (DHTML) accessibility technology to the upcoming Firefox Version 1.5. This will allow software developers to build accessible and navigable “Rich Internet Applications” (RIAs) — a new class of applications that are particularly visual and interactive. DHTML will also allow users to efficiently navigate content more easily using keystrokes rather than a mouse.

Read the full press release: IBM Contributes Open Source Code to Make FireFox Browser More Accessible (via All About Access).

Filed under: Accessibility
Comments Off Posted by Patrick H. Lauke on Wednesday, August 17, 2005

Joe Clark “Sharing the Secrets of Web Accessibility” - one day workshop / 1 September 2005 / London

Creating accessible web sites is no longer an option, it’s a necessity. During this one-day workshop, we’ll teach you how to create accessible sites that work in the real world.

Joe’s advice will help you overcome those tricky areas that most developers get stuck on. He’ll also let you in on many of the little secrets he’s picked up over the years that will help you build accessible sites more quickly and easily.

The day will be full of the tips and tricks that will save you crucial time when designing a standards-compliant site for either yourself or your client. The area of accessibility is a minefield for the developer. This one day workshop will tell you what you need to know, why you need to know it and how to implement it. By the end of the session you will feel confident in saying to any client ‘I can make your site accessible’. For a full breakdown of the day’s content see the schedule below.

This session assumes you have a working knowledge of web standards and basic familiarity with the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines, published by the W3C in 1999.

If you have any questions or if you prefer to pay by cheque or require an invoice, email gill@carsonworkshops.com.

See the full details of Joe Clark’s workshop for a complete schedule and booking information. Only 40 seats available, so make up your mind quickly. If you’ve never seen Joe speak in person, this is a must.

Filed under: Accessibility
Comments Off Posted by Patrick H. Lauke on Tuesday, August 16, 2005

Joe Clark - Sharing the Secrets of Web Accessibility

The fine people at Carson Workshops are flying Joe Clark over to London for a one day workshop, in which Joe will be Sharing the Secrets of Web Accessibility.
If you?ve never seen Joe speak before I can promise you he?s well worth
the admission price, and you?ll definitely walk away having learnt more
than you expected. Places are limited so you?ll have to be quick.
Actually you?ll have to be quick anyway ? the workshop is on Thursday
1st September.

Filed under: Accessibility
Comments Off Posted by Accessify on Tuesday, August 16, 2005

Accessibility checking using Firefox

Patrick Lauke’s Evaluating Web Sites for Accessibility with Firefox, published in the latest issue of Ariadne, is a wonderful, in-depth look at how to use Chris Pederick’s Web Developer toolbar to evaluate sites against a number of WCAG 1.0 checkpoints.

You can’t catch all the accessibility problems, but Patrick’s approach is great for handling all of the problems that are inside the angle brackets in your documents. And if you leave some of these features on all the time, you can recoil in horror at sites you may not have realized are still put together 90’s-era tag soup or deeply-nested layout tables. (Select “Outline Tables” and “Outline custom elements” with <font> to see what I mean.)

And now, time for me to take a page from Ian’s book, slip out of the country, and observe radio silence for a while.

Filed under: Accessibility
Comments Off Posted by Accessify on Thursday, August 4, 2005

Better Late Than Never

Finally I can point people in the direction of presentation slides from @media 2005. I had originally intended to put them up on this site but because of connectivity issues (house-moving) and hosting issues (ran out of disk space), this wasn’t possible. Dotjay (or Jon, as his mother refers to him) has kindly hosted the presentation slides for me. And he’s already discovered that hosting the saved pages (that I used as examples during the presentation) has given him a little Google surpise - a search for “Chippenham Sexshop” brings up his domain in the first page of results!

Anyway, without further ado, and assuming anybody is even vaguely interested now, so long after the event, here are my slides from @media 2005.

Filed under: Accessibility
Comments Off Posted by Ian on Saturday, July 30, 2005

Copying 508 vs. raising the bar

On Friday, IBM Worldwide Accessibility Director Frances West wrote an op-ed piece in News.com raising what IBM sees as a red flag: the numerous new accessibility policies in development within Europe.

Titled “Accessibility could take a step backward”, one is lulled into a sense that West is advocating advances in accessibility policy, raising the bar from Section 508, passed in the United States in 1998. However, read closer and you’ll see the real message here: IBM wants 508 to be adopted around the world, as is.

It is true that a different accessibility policy in each country in Europe would result in a terrible mess. It would mean that software companies would need to ensure that each feature meets the different requirements of each government, paralyzing the development of even the simplest applications, and fragmenting the meaning of accessibility to the point of irrelevancy. Software developed today and delivered via the Internet is, by default, international in nature.

However, it is important not to fall into the trap West lays with this argument. Standards harmonization does not mean sticking to the first thing that came along, that being 508. Accessibility laws must evolve to meet the needs of modern software development. Section 508 itself requires the Access Board to review and update the standard as necessary.

In the interest of harmonization, IBM should be urging the numerous accessibility bodies in Europe, as well as those in technology leaders such as Japan and the United States, not to settle on the least common denominator. Section 508 has in some senses been a big success, but in other areas it has failed people with disabilities, and as it becomes more dated, it is destined to fail more often. Its greatest benefit is that it sets a single benchmark with a relatively low degree of subjectivity. But that alone doesn’t mean it’s perfect; it merely makes it measurable.

We as advocates of accessibility should be aware of the dynamic between software companies, their consumers, and the regulations set forth to benefit accessibility. IBM is calling for a worldwide baseline of Section 508. What they and other vendors really need is one unified, measurable standard applicable to all of their markets. And it is to everyone’s advantage to work toward such a standard, provided it is as rigorous as necessary to fully meet the access needs of users with disabilities. Settling for the aging 508 is not a victory for international accessibility. For large companies like IBM, whose software already complies with 508, it merely enforces the status quo.

Filed under: Accessibility
Comments (1) Posted by Accessify on Tuesday, July 26, 2005

Dolphin launches the world’s first access software on a portable Pen

Announced back in March, Dolphin Computer Access is now offering versions of it’s assistive technology software that run from a USB pen drive.

Dolphin Computer Access Limited today announced the availability of the world’s first access software available through a portable Pen device. Dolphin’s version 6.51 software suite is now available to order in two separate editions: the PC Edition and the Dolphin Pen Edition.

Using the Dolphin Pen, it is possible for blind and low vision computer users around the world, to walk up to any computer and find their access program running automatically, and configured just the way they like it! From 11 th May 2005, Dolphin’s Supernova, Hal, Lunar and LunarPlus will be available to order in the new Dolphin Pen Edition, as well as the standard PC Edition.

Unlike all other screen access products, the Dolphin Pen runs from a USB Pen Drive ? a small portable device that measures just 6cm long and 2cm wide, which plugs straight into the USB slot of a computer. This allows a user to carry their software with them to any “Dolphin Pen Friendly” PC and run Supernova, Hal, Lunar or LunarPlus instantly, as if it were on their own system. The Dolphin Pen automatically saves a user’s own preferred settings, so that every time the Pen is used there is no need to reconfigure the settings. Just plug it in and go! When the Pen is removed all of the user settings are automatically saved back to the Pen.

Read the full press release.

Filed under: Accessibility
Comments Off Posted by Patrick H. Lauke on Monday, July 25, 2005

W3C Web Accessibility Initiative site redesign launched

After a period of beta and requests for feedback, the redesigned W3C Web Accessibility Initiative site was finally made live. I’m glad to see that a good number of suggestions from the community were taken into consideration (particular thanks for abandoning Gill Sans for the main copy, as at small sizes it is definitely not a pleasant on-screen font).

The curious among you may be interested in the process documentation on the WAI Web Site Redesign Project pages.

Filed under: Accessibility
Comments Off Posted by Patrick H. Lauke on Monday, July 25, 2005

The Accessibility Chronicles

OK, so I’m two weeks late posting this. My justification? Well, I only just saw it for myself today! I’m referring to a well written piece by Mike Davidson on his personal blog entitled The Accessibility Chronicles.

Does CSS-P automatically create a better user experience for blind people than table layouts?

Those who know say no.

Are unordered lists always more navigable than manually linebreaked items?

Those who know say no.

Are today’s screenreaders able to consistently interpret even the cleanest of code?

Those who know say no.

It’s well worth a read, and stay for the comments too - lots of interesting discussion happening there also.

Filed under: Accessibility
Comments Off Posted by Ian on Thursday, July 14, 2005
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