Access: Web accessibility is not a box to tick, but a conversation
4 Responses
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I found this little gem
You can show the contrast ratio for different types of colour blindness.
It is from WAT-C "Web Acccessibility Tools Consortium".
Of all things I use it to educate shooting range designers for picking the colours for target numbers!
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Thanks for giving emphasis to the importance of communicating with and getting feedback from groups of people with disabilities when designing applications and websites. In addition, I believe that it is a good idea to start the conversation with these groups during the development stage of an app or site, rather than finishing the product and getting in touch with them afterwards.
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Richard Hulse, in reply to
That is an excellent point - the earlier in the process you talk with real people the better.
The later you leave accessibility considerations in a project, the more expensive retro-fitting will be required. A bit like adding wheelchair access to a building. Very cheap to design in from scratch, very expensive, and often a compromise, if added later.
Some projects use 'personas' - a written representation of an end-user - and these are useful as a reference points, but no substitute for real people and conversations.
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might be of interest....
http://alistapart.com/article/accessibility-the-missing-ingredient
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