Eric Eggert: „Die 7½ Todsünden barrierefreien Webdesigns“

Das Netz quillt über mit gut gemeinten Ratschlägen zur Umsetzung barrierefreier Webseiten. Beherzigt man diese wortwörtlich, dann steht man oftmals hinterher mit mehr Barrieren da als vorher. Eric Eggert zeigt, wovon Sie die Finger lassen und was Sie höchstens wohldosiert einsetzen sollten.

Possibly related…

  1. Accessibility with Silverlight

    From http://team.silverlight.net/product-technology-deep-dive/silverlight-podcast-accessibility-with-silverlight/ it features Sean Hayes of the Microsoft Accessibility Business Unit. It is about accessibility on the web, with Silverlight and the Accessible Media Project.

    —Huffduffed by alastc 3 years ago

  2. Damien McCormack – Accessibility means business

    Over 4 million people in Australia have a disability. As a result they may use the web in a different way to you: a keyboard instead of a mouse; a screen reader instead of a screen. Accessibility is the way that you can tap into this large and growing audience.

    In this session, Damien will look at why accessibility matters - not just because it is the right thing to do, or a legal requirement. He will discuss how accessibility leads to more robust, maintainable, searchable and usable websites that meet everyone’s needs. Damien will also explore the opportunities accessibility offers for mobile web design, and provide some practical advice about how to include accessibility in your next project.

    —Huffduffed by bigskinnyboy 3 years ago

  3. Web Accessibility Gone Wild

    This session presents a wide variety of mistakes, blunders, misconceptions, over-indulgences, intricacies, and generally silly aspects of modern web accessibility. Sometimes the most serious errors are made by well-meaning developers who misunderstand the concepts or take their limited accessibility knowledge to an extreme level - thus web accessibility gone wild.

    From http://sxsw.com/node/4867

    —Huffduffed by adactio 3 years ago