Archive for the ‘Accessibility’ Category

Web Accessibility Matters

Tuesday, October 9th, 2007

With the recent news about Target Corp getting sued over web accessibility, webmasters are relooking at their websites and taking web accessibility standards a little more seriously.

Long long time ago (Year 2005 is a long time ago when counting web years), we wrote an article on Web Accessibility and Why it Matters. It covers simple steps of making the site accessible and the reasons why we should do so.

In an attempt to impress Search Engines, many webmasters end up focusing only on making the site search engine friendly and not user-friendly.

A well designed and accessible website takes care of search engines and humans alike!

Then why not add proper alt text to images, allows users to operate the website with a keyboard alone, give proper headings, use informative anchor texts and look for image map alternatives?

The problem is that usually website owners don’t know about these requirements and the companies they hire don’t inform them. We need web development and design companies to be more responsible and the website owners to be more informed.

Have a website that needs to be made Web Accessible? Contact us now!

Google becomes more accessible (literally) – “Google Accessible Search”

Thursday, July 20th, 2006

Google Labs now features a new product – Google Accessible Search. An outstanding product that “goes one step further than regular Google search by helping you find the most accessible pages in that result set.”

Aptly titled – “Accessible Web Search for the Visually Challenged” Google has done a terrific job by starting Accessible Search for making the search more friendly for the blind and visually impaired users.

One of the first things I wanted to do was to check how different were the results that Google gave in it’s regular web search and the ones thrown by Accessible search. The results for the same keywords differ significantly – Accessible search doing further fine tuning/processing and assigning ranking based on the evaluation factors of simplicity of the page, visual presence and here is the key “Accessibility” of the website

Taken from Accessible Search FAQ:

How do you decide which sites are “accessible” and which are not?
“Our methods for identifying accessible pages and content are always evolving; Currently we take into account several factors, including a given page’s simplicity, how much visual imagery it carries and whether or not it’s primary purpose is immediately viable with keyboard navigation.”

How can sites make their content more accessible to the blind?
“Some of the basic recommendations on how to make a website more useable and accessible include keeping Web pages easy to read, avoiding visual clutter — especially extraneous content — and ensuring that the primary purpose of the Web page is immediately accessible with full keyboard navigation. There are many organizations and online resources that offer Website owners and authors guidance on how to make websites and pages more accessible for the blind and visually impaired…”

- In case you are new to Accessibility and want to know more about it, read Avneet’s article on: “Website Accessibility – Why it matters

Accessibility: We define website accessibility as the ability of a website to be used by all, irrespective of mode or disability. More specifically, Web accessibility means that people with disabilities can perceive, understand, navigate, and interact with the Web, and that they can contribute to the Web. Web accessibility also benefits others, including older people with changing abilities due to aging.

Accessibility Statement: In what specific ways (keyword shortcuts etc.) do you make your site more accessible to disabled people.
Sample the Accessibility statement of CueBlocks.

- All the proponents of Accessibility standards would be beaming with happiness and would feel vindicated :-) . Since ‘what Google does’, resonates & has a far reaching impact on online world, “Accessibility” would be one of the words soon making inroads into the regular vocabulary of webmasters / designers / developers.

- The Impact on websites would be that the following phrases and techniques would now be “in” and more widely adhered to from here on:
- Accessibility
- Accessibility statements on sites
- Focus on content and proper coding to assist proper viewing in text based browsers and reading devices.

Overall an excellent initiative by Google and about time it happened!!

Recommended link:

Target.com gets sued – Perils of ignoring Accessibility

Friday, February 10th, 2006

Recent news about The National Federation of the Blind suing Target Corp. is another example of how important Usability and Accessibility have become in designing a website. The company was sued on the grounds that the giant retail chain discriminates because its Web site is inaccessible to blind customers. Here’s an excerpt from the news on NBC11.com:

Marc Maurer, president of the National Federation of the Blind, said that blind people gain access to the Internet by using keyboards along with special software that translates visual information into spoken words.

The lawsuit alleges that Target’s Web site, Target.com, fails to include features such as an invisible code embedded beneath images that would enable blind customers to use the screen-reading software.

Not only is it important to make the website accessible, its also important to ensure you don’t ‘over-optimize’ the website by stuffing keywords in alt text instead of explaing the image itself.

Target Corp is not the first to get sued over inaccessibility.

In 1999, the National Federation of the Blind filed a lawsuit against AOL because AOL’s Internet services were inaccessible.
In 2002, Access Now Inc and Robert Gumson sued Southwest and American airlines because Southwest’s site is allegedly inaccessible. It would be an interesting assignment to put together a list of such cases and the verdict on them.