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Web Accessibility . What do we mean by accessibility?. Outline. Technologies Why accessibility? Web standards – how do we do this then? Accessibility Testing Accessibility Myths The Industry. What is accessibility?. It’s about access for all. The social model of disability.
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Web Accessibility What do we mean by accessibility?
Outline • Technologies • Why accessibility? • Web standards – how do we do this then? • Accessibility Testing • Accessibility Myths • The Industry
What do we mean by disability • Deaf Hard of Hearing, hearing impaired • Blind, visually impaired, low vision • Mobility-impaired • Learning-disabled
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“Text is not a feature of Websites; it is a primitive, a fundamental and unalterable component” - Joe Clark
Why accessibility? • The business case • The ethical case • The legal case
The business case “The estimated spending power of people with disabilities in the UK being £40-50 billion” Employers Forum on Disability
The ethical case • The social model of disability • Cooperate social responsibility
The legal case • “...we are now using the force of argument. If that fails, we will not hesitate to use the argument of force.” • -- Bert Massie Chairman, Disability Rights Commission
Intranets “One major UK corporation which is notorious for having inaccessible public web pages, is suddenly spending considerable sums on making their intranet accessible - for no other reason (as far as my informant could tell) than because they'd realised they risked some rather high-profile court actions by employees.” -- Alan Flavell. (Alan Flavell is a well-known contributor to html-related newsgroups – he has a lot of respect within the industry. He is an acknowledged expert. His credentials are impeccable)
Intranets “A member of staff could (we hope not, but it happens) lose their sight (or 'gain' some other disability) at any time. Equally, you could employ someone. If this happens down the road, you could have a massive problem.” -- Anonymous Contributor (Intranet Forum)
<font face=verdana size=-2 color=white> <b>Welcome</b></font> back
Content Presentation Behaviour XHTML CSS DOM <h1>Welcome</h1> <p>Hello there!</p> <p>Life is great when you design with standards.</p> h1 { color: red; background: white; font: Arial; } p { color: green; background: blue; font: ”Comic Sans”; } <script type="text/javascript" language="javascript">function showPic (whichpic) { if (document.getElementById)
Want to change something? • It’s easy... • OneTwoThree • FourFive
Do the W3C know what they are talking about? “the majority of problems that disabled people mentioned regarding poor web access were not contained in any of the WAI's guidelines.” Bert Massie, DRC
Automated testing PageScreamerTM
User Testing • DRC recommendations
...it’s difficult to do. <img src=“pizzahutlogo.gif” alt=“Pizza Hut”/> Contact Andrew Gray at <a href=”mailto:agray@sift.co.uk” title=”Email Andrew Gray” tabindex=“4”>agray@sift.co.uk</a>
...a text only version is fine. Disabled access at rear.
“81 % of sites investigated failed to meet the minimum guidelines for access.” DRC Report 14/4/04
The public sector • A requirement on all new public sector IT procurement projects • A key aspect of electronic Government Interoperability Framework