ATIA Chicago 2009
Submitted by Katherine on Mon, 11/23/2009 - 10:54 – No comments
I attended and spoke at the Assistive Technology Industry Association (ATIA Chicago) conference last month. The conference was focused on educating attendees about assistive technologies and their uses in the world today. Another particular focus of the conference was creating information that remains usable and accessible by users with assistive technologies. I attended several sessions and spent a good deal of time discussing on the exhibition floor. Here are some of the highlights.
Accessibility Tips for Programmers
Submitted by Katherine on Wed, 07/29/2009 - 09:57 – No commentsProgrammers have daily close contact with web accessibility standards. They can familiarize themselves with standards and code them directly into applications and tools, know what to look for in content editing tools and management systems, and help ensure that site designs are made accessible for everyone.
Accessibility Tips for Designers
Submitted by Katherine on Wed, 07/29/2009 - 09:51 – No commentsIn web accessibility, much emphasis is placed on making a site's content work with screen readers. While this is a crucial step in the accessibility process, there are many other measures to take into consideration. The way a site looks will greatly impact the user's experience. Designers can have a large influence on a site's web accessibility as it relates to any disability, especially visual disabilities, perception disabilities, intellectual disabilities, memory impairments, and physical disabilities.
Accessibility Tips for Content Writers
Submitted by Katherine on Wed, 07/29/2009 - 09:47 – No commentsWriting content for the web is a daily task. Websites that update content frequently are more valuable to the user, as this reflects that the owners of the site care about the quality of the information they are putting out on the web.
New MWBP Doc and WCAG Standards
Submitted by Katherine on Wed, 05/27/2009 - 06:24 – No commentsAccording to W3.org, the Mobile Web Best Practices (MWBP) Working Group and the Web Access Initiative (WAI) Education and Outreach Working Group yesterday released a final draft of "Relationship Between MWBP and WCAG."
This document is one of several new writings to come out of W3 regarding the mobile web and content accessibility standards. As more and more mobile devices gain access to the interwebs, more standards arise.
Roles in Accessibility
Submitted by Katherine on Mon, 05/18/2009 - 17:22 – No commentsA gear is a component within a transmission device that transmits rotational force to another gear or device. A gear is different from a pulley in that a gear is a round wheel that has linkages ("teeth" or "cogs") that mesh with other gear teeth, allowing force to be fully transferred without slippage. Depending on their construction and arrangement, geared devices can transmit forces at different speeds, torques, or in a different direction, from the power source.
(Thanks, Wikipedia.)
Been doing some research recently regarding components of web accessibility. For a site, a page, an app to be fully accessible, it takes cooperation in several relationships between components.
