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Learning to Read Math using JAWS
How do I start reading math formulae using JAWS ? Before you get started, you need to make sure you have the right setup. You need …[.. Read More]
How do I start reading math formulae using JAWS ? Before you get started, you need to make sure you have the right setup. You need …[.. Read More]
Properly done, an accessible page will do what is needed for people with disabilities, and not be noticed bu the general population Something to keep in mind is that most disabilities come in *degrees* - so although you may not have many totally blind people visiting your website, you quite likely have a lot of older people who's vision isn't as good as when they were young - and proper font/color choices will help those people as well, even though they aren't "disabled" (My personal pet peeve - CSS sheets that set the text of input fields to "black", without bothering to check if maybe I have a light-on-dark theme set by default. So their forced black ends up on my dark blue background and becomes unreadable. Leaving the color off would result in a light-blue on dark-blue, and specifying the background as well would solve it too. Yahoo, this means *YOU* :) Read more
You might want to check out the Dublin section of Craig's List, the site is great for finding exactly this type of thing. http://dublin.craigslist.org/ Read more
try mobile9.com mobiles24.com zedge.net ventones.com myxertones.com phonezoo.com Read more
I am unsure of your question. If your looking for a software that makes W3C web content then the nearest web builder you can get is a software which is the best web builder on the planet. Its called WYSIWYG Web Builder. Most of the pre-coding is W3C and its an easy drag and drop web builder without the need to use invisable forms! Trust me, I love it and you can also advance code in it too! Its GREAT! http://www.wysiwygwebbuilder.com/ Read more
Accessibility is a difficult topic for many web developers and which is raising questions of whether it is needed for a website. While specifications like Section 508 help drive developers down the correct path, accessibility is a matter of finding the best way to make the most of your site. I have found that maintaing too much accesibility features for a site sometime gives a negative impact to a regular visitors. Maintaing both web2.0 looks and feel, ajax, accessibility and SEO in same place is a real challenge for a developer. Sure, you can work on about all the business benefits like increased traffic, good PR but what you really need to be able to do is show that it's possible to do this without compromising on the design. That's often where the problems begin. When we think about highly accessible sites, the first ones that spring to mind are not necessarily fantastic looking examples. There are very few sites which maintains all these standards and here goes a list of few I come across reccently: http://www.wired.com/ http://www.lestout.com/ http://www.bbc.co.uk/ http://www.espn.com/ http://www.onedayfilms.com/ So, in summary, there are many sites which need to follow web content accessibility guildines properly. Read more
You can try to use the site bellow: http://www.ecademy.com/module.php?mod=club&t=61656 Read more
As with CSS, my first real contact with accessibility came with my job at Salford. Although I was peripherally aware of the concept, and had previously heard mentions of the WCAG (Web Content Accessibility Guidelines), it was never something I thought I needed to concern myself with. However, researching some of the legal requirements involving educational websites in the UK, I inevitably came across SENDA (Special Educational Needs and Disabilities Act) and the wider DDA (Disabilities Discrimination Act). To summarise very broadly, the DDA demands, among other things, that the provision of goods and services should be (within reason) accessible to anybody. In its initial state, the DDA did only cover businesses and government bodies, making a special exception for educational establishments. SENDA, which effectively became part IV of the DDA, removed this special status, bringing education back under the general provisions of the main DDA. Although the Act itself does not directly mention web sites, the 'Code of Practice - Rights of Access Goods, Facilities, Services and premises' does, and it is understood that therefore all government, education and business sites need to make 'reasonable adjustments' to ensure a basic level of accessibility. So, having started my position as web editor at the University of Salford and realising the legal requirement imposed by SENDA/DDA, I began delving deeper into the subject of accessibility. What I found was that, even among 'seasoned' web managers in the UK education sector and beyond, there was a lot of ignorance and confusion - coupled with misinformed management concerned with 'Bobby validation' as the be all and end all. This sorry state of affairs, combined with the fact that, deep down, I feel that accessibility is simply the ethically/morally right thing to do, led me to explore this subject further. I find it fascinating that even though in recent years more and more sites, books and even conferences have been devoted to accessibility, there are still many grey areas once you move beyond the basics, where even experts can furiously disagree. It's not all cut and dry, and in many instances one has to take a pragmatic approach, weighing up how things should be done (according to things like W3C specifications or even common sense) against how they work in practice (in light of flaky browser or assistive technology support, for instance). Read more
WAI develops... * guidelines widely regarded as the international standard for Web accessibility * support materials to help understand and implement Web accessibility * resources, through international collaboration -- They are there to help content providers, web developers, graphic designers, and software developers to create accessible websites for the disabled, elderly, and devices other than the normal PC/MAC. Read more
Do you want to know about accessibility??? Check out this link at W3C: http://www.w3.org/WAI/intro/accessibility.php Hope this helps! Read more
If you could I'd be off suing 99.999% of the internet if only so I could get them to get their act together. No, you can't. They're guidelines, not law. The only situation where accessibility guidelines aren't an opt-in sort of thing is any sort of federal/government website. Anything that receives any sort of federal funding by law should comply with these standards. That being said, it's not really enforced except on major sites such as the Mass. Bay Transit Authority (who have an amazingly well built site, they got a Webbie for it). Read more