The Digital Divide: Treating the Disabled as People
Life is hard enough for people with sight and motor disabilities, why should the Internet make it harder?
Jacob Nielsen conducted a test on 19 websites; observing 84 users who were either blind or had low vision or motor impairments. His results concluded that general websites treat the disabled 3 times worse than the average user.
Here are a few suggestions when considering web design for disabled users according to NetMechanic:
When you are finished coding, you may check your site for “quality, accessibility, and privacy issues” at Watchfire WebXACT by simply typing in the URL.1. Text Equivalent: Always provide a text equivalent to any information you present with graphics, videos, applets, etc. Use the text to describe the content and/or function, not merely to describe the graphic. If you include a chart that illustrates how company sales rose 300% in only a year, use that descriptive text in your ALT tag ('Sales Up 300% in FY2000!') instead of merely labeling it 'sales chart graphic.'
2. Alternate Navigation: Always provide a text links somewhere on your page if you rely mainly on image maps for site navigation.
3. Color: Don't use color as a primary means to impart information. If you display sale items in red text, try to group them together under a text section header that says: "Sale-Priced Items!" Choose colors and color combinations carefully too: as many as 1 in 12 white males have some sort of color blindness.
4. Links: Clearly label your links as links and describe the destination. Be particularly careful with this if you're using an image as an important link. A graphic of a shopping cart should clearly indicate that it links to the shopping cart page: 'View the contents of your shopping cart' and not merely 'Shopping Cart.'
5. JavaScript Alternative: Remember that some browsers don't support JavaScript or that users may have it disabled. Provide JavaScript alternatives to any critical functions on your Web page.
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