W3C Web Accessibility Standards 2.0 200
WildFire42 writes "The W3C has released their W3C WCAG 2.0 Standards (that's World Wide Web Consortium Web Content Accessibility Guidelines) for a request for comments before it becomes a standard. I've discovered quite a variety of geeks here that may access web content in a variety of methods, from screen readers, to Braille displays, to open captioning on streamed videos, etc. Web accessibility is still in its infancy (relatively), but is becoming a concern for more people every day. Once the WCAG 2.0 becomes a recognized standard (probably sometime in 2004), it will most likely be a concern for web developers, but the W3C still wants input from the public, to get a feel of the kinds of disabilities that have not received enough focus in the 1.0 standards. More information on the Interest Group is at the W3C Web Accessibility Initiative page. Your input and insight is needed!"
Pew! (Score:5, Funny)
No wonder people don't RTFA.
Re:Pew! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Pew! (Score:2)
2. written in an over-abstract, PhD-thesis prose-style
Perhaps, then, somebody should write the "In Plain English" or "Clearly Explained" version?
Re:Pew! (Score:4, Insightful)
My theory is that there's three important dimensions in labelling a link: first the topic, then the resource-type (etext, image, etc), and last the rating (good or bad).
Topic usually doesn't change within a sentence, so I like to add a 'text button' at the end that augments the topic-info with the resource-type. [examples] [robotwisdom.com]
I usually skip the rating unless it's especialy good or bad.
If you're referring to an organisation or source of information, it's very useful only helpful to put it there.
The problem is, you can't specify the resource type-- if it's a book-title, are you linking a full etext, or a review, or the Amazon page? For an organisation, you can guess it will be their official website, but this is not reliable. (I make an exception when the sentence mentions the resource type, like "There's a great weblog [robotwisdom.com] I stumbled upon...")
If you find any inline links to be too intrusive, just set your user agent
They reduce readability for everyone, even if the color is tweaked, so the author should look for a better way....imho.
Re:Pew! (Score:2)
Gee, linking the relevant text to it perhaps.
Re:Pew! (Score:2)
This breaches WCAG2.0 Guideline 3.3.1.d [w3.org] which requires that linked text make sense out of context. No doubt, you will say that people don't use links out of context, and this has already been proven false [slashdot.org]. So your theory is widely considered to be an accessibility obstacle.
Naturally, you will recognise that WCAG2.0 is not yet a tech
Re:Pew! (Score:2, Insightful)
Hrmm (Score:5, Interesting)
sounds good to me...
Re:Hrmm (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Hrmm (Score:2)
How about a recommendation to get rid of popups/unders?
I haven't had a problem with them since I stopped using IE. :) Maybe we should put forward a recommendation that everyone who uses it switch to Mozilla, Opera, etc.?
Re:Hrmm (Score:4, Insightful)
Very few web sites that I've seen care about accessibility standards. Very few web devs, it seems, even care about W3C standards, because they develop for browsers (i.e. IE) rather than for the web (i.e. W3C standards). Check a number of pages with Watchfire Bobby [watchfire.com] and you'll see. Even slashdot has quite a few "violations" of the WCAG 1.0 standard.
Re:Hrmm (Score:2)
Sites screwing with browsers. (Score:2)
It's even worse than that. Some sites have Flash or Java, which pops up a plugin warning dialog in Mozilla (I don't want either installed), and the page will change focus back to the main window. I have to find the dialog again (either with alt-tab or moving the window, because the browser window will be on top), and click the stupid If I leave too many of these dialogs open, Mozi
Re:Hrmm (Score:2, Interesting)
The problem is that 95%+ of traffic that web sites see is IE. Realistically, when 95% of your traffic is one browser, you make sure things work in that browser first and worry about the other guys later, when time and budget permit. It sucks, but that's the way things are, and since AOL was bought off I don't see things getting any better.
Here's a useful tool (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Here's a useful tool (Score:4, Informative)
Of course, automated tools cannot accurately test for compliance with WCAG, Section 508, or similar accessibility requirements, merely check a few things and give pointers to the bits it cannot check.
I've found that the Accessibility Valet [webthing.com] does a very good job, much better than Bobby used to (I haven't tried Bobby in a while though).
Re:Here's a useful tool (Score:2)
We've tried to solve this by generating different web applications based on a user's accessibility preferences. Disabled users g
Re:Here's a useful tool (Score:3, Insightful)
I work in an office that does accessibility reviews, and we have never used Bobby. It was bought out by a for-profit (after belonging to a NFP group for quite some time) and has more or less stagnated.
Bobby will give you an enormous list of things to fix, but most of what it says can be ignored and it ignores most of what needs to be said.
At the moment, our office doesn't recommend any automated accessibility checker. LIF
Re:Here's a useful tool (Score:2)
I agree - Bobby really is quite useless. It gets confused easily and spews out incorrect messages left and right. It's probably the worst validation tool I've ever used.
get the checklist instead of the W3C novella format
The checklist [w3.org] really is the best way to go.
Re:Here's a useful tool (Score:2, Informative)
Article (Score:2, Funny)
Standards? Ok. Compulsory standards? Not ok. (Score:4, Interesting)
This really annoyes me. The web is a visual medium. It should not be compulsory to cater for those that can't benefit from a visual medium, in a visual medium.
We don't have legislation to ensure that every book that is released has a braille version and a speaking book version do we? No. Why take on the web this way?
Yes I've been hit by this myself, and it's hugely frustrating being on the end of it as a site developer having the spectre of the law raised above you...
Re:Standards? Ok. Compulsory standards? Not ok. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Standards? Ok. Compulsory standards? Not ok. (Score:4, Insightful)
The w3c guidelines are mostly common-sense hints about what not to do. Many barriers to access are unintentional; the w3c is doing web developers a service by pointing them out.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Standards? Ok. Compulsory standards? Not ok. (Score:2)
Well they don't have to compete with other sites, and their credibility is judged differently to commercial sites, so why waste the resources?
Then what is your point?
Why would you expect an accessibility requirement to improve the graphica
Re:Standards? Ok. Compulsory standards? Not ok. (Score:5, Insightful)
That's [csszengarden.com] not [mezzoblue.com] true [pga.com] at [inc.com] all [adaptivepath.com].
Accessible websites don't have to be ugly. What makes you think that they do?
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Standards? Ok. Compulsory standards? Not ok. (Score:2)
Are you confusing me with somebody else? I am arguing that conforming to standards does not make sites look bad.
The rest of your argument is the tired old "lowest common denominator" straw man argument that has been refuted over and over again. I don't see the point in rehashing it once more, so just read this refutation [gla.ac.uk] instead.
Re:Standards? Ok. Compulsory standards? Not ok. (Score:2)
The web is a more flexible and accessible medium than print will ever be. The web doesn't suffer print's shortcomings of inflexible page sizes, inking processes, and a lot of rules that work well in the print world fail when used on the web. The print world is inflexible, the web is not.
What can be done on the web for very low cost is extortionately expensive for the print world. Sin
Re:Standards? Ok. Compulsory standards? Not ok. (Score:2, Flamebait)
I've worked with blind people : there's a lot of simple services and entertainments that aren't accessible to them simply because selfish brats like you say "to hell with them, this or that isn't designed for them so why should we go out of our way to allow them to access it.".
Guess what: blind people go to art museums to touch sculptures, they go
Re:Standards? Ok. Compulsory standards? Not ok. (Score:2)
As opposed to mindless drivel posturing as logical arguments, of couse.
Ahhh, so you can't tell the difference between a web page and a book.
Where on earth do you get off delivering a half-assed job, and then _expect_ to get paid to fix it. Why not do it right the first
Re:Standards? Ok. Compulsory standards? Not ok. (Score:5, Insightful)
For example, if you compare the technology required to read a paper book out loud to that required to read an electronic text file out aloud, I'm sure you will see that the latter is a far easier task. There's no reason to make it difficult, but designers do, just because they think it is more important to have a heading in their own choice of font (presented as a bitmap) than for a minority to be able to read it.
You might also like to bear in mind that local government in the UK has a duty to make information available in a form that people can understand. That's why most leaflets tell you where to get hold of a large-print version, or in audio tape form. (Presumably your neighbour tells you this from the original leaflet if you can't read it yourself!)
So I ask again: The web is ideally suited to avoid the effort required to make paper documents universally accessible. Why make it difficult?
The Web is not a visual medium (Score:5, Insightful)
The Web is not a visual medium. Yes, it contains a lot of visual content, but there's also plenty of text content that can be presented just fine in a non-visual manner.
As a Web author, your role is to describe the structure of the content. If you use proper markup, such as H1 for headings and P for paragraphs, then browsers can present your content in an appropriate manner whether it be visual or non-visual.
The Web still consists mostly of text content, and there's nothing visual about that. (Yes, I know about porn, but there's still plenty of text content even there.)
Re:The Web is not a visual medium (Score:2, Interesting)
Goldfarb's Conjecture has been repeated so often and so mindlessly that everyone's forgotten it's a hypothesis about human cognition that's never actually been tested. Do writers and/or readers really organise a text as a hierarchy of nested structural containers, a
Re:The Web is not a visual medium (Score:4, Insightful)
Tagging a phone number would be extremely useful for the many new smartphones and phone/PDA combos that include a Web browser. Then those browsers could allow you to easily call the number, send an SMS/MMS, or add the number to your address book.
Re:The Web is not a visual medium (Score:2)
Certainly, I'm all in favor of semantic markup, but Goldfarb's Conjecture that styles should naturally be layered on top of these semantics is just deluded, imho. (The best approach to semantic markup would even be visible to screen scrapers, I think.)
Re:The Web is not a visual medium (Score:2)
Can you provide a cohesive and plain English explanation as to why. Certainly the entire print industry is fashioned along the same concept, and they seem to be running along all fine and dandy.
An infeasible and unworkable solution with no realistic possibility of existing within our lifetime. The solution you mock (of semantic markup)
Re:The Web is not a visual medium (Score:2, Interesting)
Separation of structure and style not only makes your work easier. It will also make a difference for blind users when
Re:The Web is not a visual medium (Score:2)
There's no reason to burden the published page with authoring hints.
It will also make a difference for blind users when tool builders can actually count on it.
I think this oft-repeated claim is a hoax.
Re:The Web is not a visual medium (Score:3, Informative)
Re:The Web is not a visual medium (Score:2)
That is indeed your choice which can be forced for your ecstatic pleasure by disabling stylesheets in your browser and supplementing it with your own stylesheet with your preferences to render content exactly how you prefer it.
However, I disagree with you entirely, yet I don't force my choice on you. Please consider respecting the readers of website before continuing your ongoing puffery.
Re:The Web is not a visual medium (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm not familiar with Goldfarb's conjecture, but the person you are replying to isn't talking about human cognition. It's about presenting content appropriately. Unless you are arguing that the same presentation is always suitable for everyone, or that you can easily convert one presentation into another, I don't see what your point is.
All visitors do if the search engine they use pays more attention to emphasized text.
Re:The Web is not a visual medium (Score:2)
Goldfarb invented SGML, and initiated the theory that structures naturally precede styles.
but the person you are replying to isn't talking about human cognition. It's about presenting content appropriately.
It's only appropriate if it conforms to human cognition.
[Does a blind-reader really benefit from EM instead of I,]
All visitors do if the search engine they use pays more attention to emphasized text.
So you're trying to use this arbitrary choice to j
Re:The Web is not a visual medium (Score:2)
I know who he is, I'm just unfamiliar with his Conjecture.
But the presentation of the document to the end user is a completely different topic to the file format applications use to transfer information to each other.
Re:The Web is not a visual medium (Score:2)
It's just my pun on Goldbach's Conjecture in math.
the presentation of the document to the end user is a completely different topic to the file format applications use to transfer information to each other.
I think you're making a cognitive claim, even there (about the cognitive relationship between structures and styles).
I'm saying nothing about Goldfarb. You asked if there was a benefit to using EM for emphasis instead of misusing I. I pointed ou
Re:The Web is not a visual medium (Score:2)
So you are arguing that HTML is bad because authoring in it isn't intuitive? This is a separate issue to the benefits of said structuring when applied as an interoperable file format. There is no requirement of actually authoring in HTML, you can author however you like as long as you can parse the information out of it appropriately with some program before publishing it.
Re:The Web is not a visual medium (Score:2)
Finally, you've nailed Goldfarb's Conjecture-- the untested hypothesis about the cognitive processes of authors. (That's what I reject.)
People don't really have structures in mind when they write, they arrange styles and whitespace to present their ideas as clearly as possible.
Re:The Web is not a visual medium (Score:2)
OK, I see your point now.
It may indeed be that you are correct, it is not easy for an author to write structured rather than visual content. In the real world we see that the WYSIWYG doctrine is hugely more widespread than structured markup. Even though programs like M$ Word have a styles concept, people ar
Re:The Web is not a visual medium (Score:2)
And your non-existant fantasy totally dependant on the unmaterialised AI solutions is better how?
I can use the web right now to search for stuff, and it returns me a decent amount of well structured information. It works.
Re:The Web is not a visual medium (Score:2)
This is clearly not true. Every serious author has a plan of the structure before they start writing. Fiction is well known for the preplanning work required to structure the story around plots and subplots, plus the detailed working out of characters before the first chapters are written.
Two massive examples. Tolkien worked out most of Middle Earth before he started writing Lord of the Rings. He worked out life and time lines, histories and my
Re:The Web is not a visual medium (Score:2)
Where Goldfarb erred, imho, is in thinking that styles are arbitrary/secondary/inferior, and structures are absolute and superior. But styles are actually expressive, so revising them wholesale via stylesheets actually changes the impact of the document. Mediocre authors won't mind, perhaps, but serious authors should care how the document looks, and not surrender the de
Re:The Web is not a visual medium (Score:2)
Google is experimenting with a number of structual-based searches. On http://labs.google.com there are two searches based on structural markup.
Google Sets is based on list structures.
Google Gloss
Re:The Web is not a visual medium (Score:2)
Again, this is not even reflected in the real world. An article writer writes structured articles for publications. It is the designers job to style it as best fits the publication, not the author. This is what happens in the real world.
Re:The Web is not a visual medium (Score:2)
Empty paragraphs are meaningless - much like your "Goldfarb's Conjecture". Its a pity your "proposed solutions" are nothing more than unrealistic over-hyped expecations largely derived from the wasteland that is Artificial Intelligence. In case you hadn't noticed, people are rather tired of waiting for you AI wunderkinds to produce something the real world can use righ
Re:The Web is not a visual medium (Score:2)
False. This practice of structuring first and styling after predates Goldfarb and even the print industry. I can trace an immediate path of this practice all the way back to the Middle Ages. I expect pre-historians and archeologists can trace it back even further. Even to way before the early Egyptian civilisation. Its nothing new.
Re:The Web is not a visual medium (Score:2)
GOOD writers are well aware of the structure of information, how structure affects comprehension, and how proper use of structure can make writing easier. If the writer does her job, the readers don't notice a thing except that they can find the information they
Re:The Web is not a visual medium (Score:2, Informative)
from EM instead of I, or from P instead of BR-BR?
Beeing blind, I feel uniquely qualified to comment here. Yes, absolutely the blind person does benefit from proper markup! In fact, if you use proper markup, you will go a long way twoards making an accessible site. Perhaps an example is in order here.
First off, like most other blind people I know, I use IE as the underlying browser. Unfortunately at this time, its the only one that supports accessibility to any real
Re:The Web is not a visual medium (Score:2)
*pulls a random book off a shelf* Look, each page has a page number. There's a table of contents at the start. There are even breaks called chapters and sections. Paging through, there's different type of headings, and there's even an index at the back.
Heck, the book can actually be read in a sequential fashion, reading the pages in an ascending fashion. Heck every page can be linearly read starting from the
Re:The Web is not a visual medium (Score:2)
But are there ever semantic/structural/stylistic units that overlap paragraph/section/chapter boundaries? Are there ever odd little exceptions that the creative authors have thrown in, with no pre-existing theory about what level of structure they embody?
Finnegans Wake [no apostrophe, sweetie] is just one book written by a drug-induced fogey.
White wine is not a drug, and 41yo is not a fogey. [info] [robotwisdom.com]
Re:The Web is not a visual medium (Score:2)
Paragraphs, sections and chapters are structural units. Even a book is a structural unit. A page is also a structure. Sentences are structure, they contain a linear sequence of words. Even words themselves have structure. Language also has structure.
Without structure you have nothing that can be efficiently reused or passed on.
Even the priests of the Middle Ages understand the value of structured i
Re:The Web is not a visual medium (Score:2)
The designed-for purpose of the Web wasn't visual at all. That's clear fr
Re:The Web is not a visual medium (Score:2)
Actually, normal HTML is perfectly accessible to most people, incl
Re:The Web is not a visual medium (Score:2)
I'm not following you. Normal HTML, such as HTML 4.01. Javascript, CSS and Flash are not part of normal HTML.
Re:The Web is not a visual medium (Score:2)
You haven't stated why you think the Internet is visual. You just keep insisting that it must be so. Can you give any reasons to back up your claim?
Re:The Web is not a visual medium (Score:2)
The last one is most certainly incorrect. It should be:
Monitor. Visual.
Speakers. Aural
Refreshable Braille Display. Tactile
Now, dial up the the net using your modem. request a page, and now pick up your connected phone. Listen. Notice you can hear the data being sent, although you can't see it. The TCP/IP stack takes the packets and reconstructs the requested resource. At this point, you get to choose how this resource is represented. you can pick a
Re:The Web is not a visual medium (Score:2)
You're starting to sound like a legislator to me ;-) (uhm, sorry, that must be one of the most offending things one could write on /. I don't really mean it that hard.)
For one thing, let's not talk about the Internet as a whole. You can do VoIP over th
Re:Standards? Ok. Compulsory standards? Not ok. (Score:2)
From your comments, you seem to be suffering from the same misconception as whoever posted the article. Web accesibility is not in its infancy, it was strangled whilst learning to walk during Browser Wars, by a couple of greedy companies and a load of graphic designers, most of whom appear(ed) to know nothing about traditional publishing, let alone machine markup. What is happening now is Web Accessibility Reloaded.
If we want an Internet page description language, various options exist, including the newis
Re:Standards? Ok. Compulsory standards? Not ok. (Score:5, Informative)
EVERYBODY and their brother gets up-in-arms about having the government legislate their web design. Nobody bothers to read this stuff.
So here're my bullet points:
1) s508 compliance it's only required if you're a federal government agency or contractor, and even then there are some exceptions.
2) C'mon people, it's really *not* that hard to comply. Got ALT tags? You're halfway there. Lose the 7 layers of nested tables and nobody'll complain.
3) it's 2003 now - the era of overdesigned websites ended with the
4) A site doesn't have to be ugly and nonvisual to be accessible. Proper use of CSS can give you a fantastic site that degrades nicely into a screen-reader, brailler, etc.
5) Not every disabled person involved is a blind, deaf quadrapelegic. Some are just nearsighted folks who want to set the font size something above the Arial-submicroscopic-pt that eagle-eyed designers often use. Why not let them?
6) There are several hundred million users worldwide who consider themselves disabled in some way. If you're selling things, would you shut your door to 200,000,000 potential customers because it's inconvenient for you to serve them?
7) A plus to an accessible website is that it will almost always degrade well to other browsers - especially things like wireless devices and phones. Make your site accessible, and you've gone a long way towards making it mobile as well.
8) Jeffrey Zeldman's new book "Designing with Web Standards" is an excellent resource. He demonstrates how to use current standards like XHTML, CSS to create websites that are complaint with standards, work well on the vast majority of browsers, are attractive, usable, and accessible. Definitely worth checking out, as is his website, www.zeldman.com.
Accessibility shouldn't be considered an incovnenience - it's just good practice.
Re:Standards? Ok. Compulsory standards? Not ok. (Score:2)
Re:Standards? Ok. Compulsory standards? Not ok. (Score:2)
No it isn't. This is a common mistake.
Section 508 is actually Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act [section508.gov]. Americans with Disabilities Act [gov.org] also covers the accessibility requirement. There is also the Section 255 of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 [fcc.gov] also lays out accessibility guidelines.
Section 508 applies to federal agencies and companies providing service to federal agencies
ADA applies to businesses and government organisations providing p
Re:Standards? Ok. Compulsory standards? Not ok. (Score:2)
Using my browser, you sound like an idiot. The web isn't a visual medium, a visual representation of a web page is only one representation, and not the only representation.
Re:Standards? Ok. Compulsory standards? Not ok. (Score:2)
Second, the web is not a visual medium, it is a mechanism to interconnect information. Markup languages structure this information which makes it easier to present in non-standard, but sensible, manners. That is why we should take on the web this way.
Finally, most of the recommendations are common sense pointers, the fact that you found them highly frustrating indicates tha
When is a standard not a standard? (Score:4, Insightful)
Or in some cases, when a standard is so ill-defined as to allow for multiple incompatible interpretations, making it impossible to figure out if you've followed it.
Historically, browsers have consistantly been incompatible, plug-ins have been required to accomplish those things the browsers didn't accomplish, and the goal of content over form has been lost since the <b> tag stuck it's elbow in the <em> tag''s face.
Web site developers, meanwhile, are not only ignorant of the standards, but would be actively encouraged to ignore them by their client even if they knew. The people who build these sites do not care about accessability any more than spammers really care about those people who get mad at the e-mails.
At this point, testing with normal browsers has become impossible, since there are multiple versions of IE, both Mac and PC, on the streets, all of them rendering CSS differently, Mozilla has split yet again, Safari is trying to gain market share, and Opera is still causing web developers to pull their hair out.
And now you want an accessability standard?
I've been a beta tester. I've been a web designer. And I've had an internet account for a decade now. The industry is incapable of following the standards it currently has. It doesn't need new ones. It sure as heck isn't going to follow them. If someone needs an accessabilty guideline, they can use Section 508 [section508.gov] for now. It'll do the job until the industry can get it's act together.
Re:When is a standard not a standard? (Score:2)
"Accessible" also means accessible for people with different browsers. If you follow the WAI guidelines, your site will work OK in all of them, not only
Re:When is a standard not a standard? (Score:2)
Whose specs? Theirs? Why? Who really cares? The groups that do take them seriously are the exception, not the rule. For all intents and purposes, w3.org is the Pope of the net: outspoken, clueless, talked about, but for the most part, ignored.
Web designers are not paid by w3.org. Their clients (who do pay them) don't care about w3.org. The clients customers have probably never heard of w3.org. The vast majority of the net simply doesn't care.
I coded sites to existing standards 3 years
Re:When is a standard not a standard? (Score:2)
For interoperability [evolt.org].
They care when their website breaks. They care when they find out they are breaking the law (accessibility is legally required for many people).
Times change. Netscape 4.x and Internet Explorer 4.x are c
Re:When is a standard not a standard? (Score:2)
They are nearly identical. The WAI has some things that 508 does not and 508 has things that the WAI does not, but they're mostly small things.
As far as 508 is concerned, many government web sites that are required to follow it don't. There is no government organization that you can call and have 508 explained to a luddite, or to a web designer. (so we do it, usually.)
Many companies are plunking down tens of thousands of dollars for
It isn't just wheelchairs that go up ramps. (Score:2)
One interesting thing I found with a few seconds fumbling was the use of
on this page
http://bobby.cast.org/bobby/html/en/gls/g10 9
recently I was reading XHTML stuff and noticed that if you want to be forward thinking any new stuff you create would be better off chosing as xhtml requires it.
and I thought back to all the times I've had to write special case code to deal with "checked", if only I'd known.
The tips I have read mostly, for me anyway, deal with filli
grep < hey did you mean etrans? (Score:2)
<input
and <input
is what i was on about
Laxism in webpage building programs (Score:2)
Usually artists who design the visual part of a web page don't want to spawn Vim - they use these graphical tools which rarely comply even to HTML4/tagsoup. Table layouts are so commonplace even today and these documents make no sense structurally.
And a lot of artists prefer using Shockwave/Flash to build pages: they get more control. That w
Re:Laxism in webpage building programs (Score:2)
It's really not that bad--I don't speak for frontpage, which is microsoft junk anyways...
The truth is that making a document accessible is hard, and expensive. It's extra work...and you know how that goes. It's very hard, if not impossible for a piece of software to add metadata for you (think of alt image tags.)
Re:Laxism in webpage building programs (Score:2)
So what creates websites, the tool or the user of the tool? If the tool is creating the website, why is anyone paying a web designer? If the web designer is creating the site using tools that produce inaccessible markup, why is the designer using a broken tool.
To me it is the web designer's responsibility to select tools that do the job. Don't blame th
Compulsory vs Voluntary, Public vs Private... (Score:2)
The reason I ask is that I can certainly understand why official government and commercial web sites might need to be held to rather strict standards -- the freedom of speech does not apply to them nearly to th
Re:Compulsory vs Voluntary, Public vs Private... (Score:3, Insightful)
There are many countries in which accessibility is a legal requirement for lots of organisations. For more information on these, please see WAI Policy [w3.org].
I believe the mo
Re:Compulsory vs Voluntary, Public vs Private... (Score:2)
In terms of the UK, feel free to read up on the law yourself [disability.gov.uk]. Or did you mean what should be the case? All the accessibility related laws I've heard about have some provision that it should be "reasonable" to provide services in an accessible manner.
Are you kidding? HTML is accessible by default
Re:Compulsory vs Voluntary, Public vs Private... (Score:2)
A site that presents visual content (art, comics, or whatever) can not be made "accessible," since the point of the page, looking at the visual content, is lost to those who can't see. Many of these sites could be considered "commercial," depending on where you draw the line. However, the last thing a page that presents visual contet needs is the government forcing them to waste time and money to make their page accessible to th
Re:Compulsory vs Voluntary, Public vs Private... (Score:2)
What is silly is that web designers can't produce quality and valid work, and so people have resorted to legal enforcement to get them to do so. People are merely protecting their rights to participate in society.
Re:Compulsory vs Voluntary, Public vs Private... (Score:3, Insightful)
Any site by an organization or company that serves the general public should comply. It's a no-brainer ... why would you deliberately create websites that only some of the visitors can use? How many potential customers do you want to turn away at the door, after spending a lot of effort to get them to the site with search engines and ads ... it might work for a trendy nightclub, but it's a suicidal tactic for a web-based business.
I'f Timmy's Terrific
Sheesh (Score:2, Insightful)
Why do you say that?
The HTML standard has been out for years, and it isn't a concern for the average web developer. Why should they start being concerned about accessibility guidelines, when right now they write pages that can only be viewed in Internet Explorer, or only after installing some sort of trojan/spyware on your machine?
Remember when you could type in an address
disconnect triggers from events (Score:2)
It may be infrastructure and belongs "behind the GypRock" but yhou still have to deal with it in a coherent fashion.
Re:the internet community (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:the internet community (Score:5, Informative)
It's a standard that tells you _how_ to use the already existing standards (such as the alt property on tags or providing transcripts to audio feeds).
Then again, I'm sure you already knew this, and thus posted this as an AC. Still, people may not be as smart as you, so I'll post it anyways =D
Re:Oh goody (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Oh goody (Score:2, Informative)
I'll give a recent example; in Windows XP, press Windows Key-U. Here we find Narrator, Magnifier, and On Screen Keyboard. Narrator is a very simple screen reader that is able to read dialogs and other alerts aloud. Magnifier is self-descriptive. On-screen keyboard has a fair amount of configurability. If you go to Settings>Typing Mode, it can actually be co
Re:Another Useless doc from a Useless Comittee (Score:3, Informative)
The W3C is a consortium that includes the makers of IE, Netscape, Opera, and Safari. Check their About page [w3.org] and the member list [w3.org].
(I know, I've been trolled, but some might find the clarification useful.)
Bandwidth and W3C Recommendations (Score:5, Informative)
On what do you base this claim? In my experience, most pages that attempt to comply with W3C Recommendations use less bandwidth than the non-compliant tag soup that dominates the Web. Tag soup pages generally include useless images and bloated markup (<font>, unnecessary tables) that standards-based pages don't have.
Re:Valid (x)HTML (Score:2)
All that should be a concern is using valid HTML
That's certainly an excellent start (though valid XHTML would be far preferable), but not by any means a full solution. If I post an image that contains relevant information (a graph, say), all I need to provide is a simple ALT tag ("Usage graph for 2002"), and a HTML validator will let it pass. But that tag is of no use to someone who can't see it, but needs the information in conveys. That's why we need more comprehensive standards to ensure that, as the
Re:Valid (x)HTML (Score:2)
What do you think the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines are for?
Please back that up. The trend is towards less bandwidth usage, not more. Take a look at the recent redesigns by many high-profile
Re:I think it is good. (Score:3, Informative)
This is already happening.