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Thread: Web accessiblity and barriers examples
Number of posts in this thread: 4 (In chronological order)
From: MUHAMMAD AKRAM
Date: Thu, May 31 2007 1:30AM
Subject: Web accessiblity and barriers examples
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Hello,
is there any website that show example of web accessibilities and barriers? for example I can find many website that use fixed font that cannot be increase by view > text size option. so i can show that as an example and comparing with those accessible website that allowed text size control.
what am trying to do is collecting example to make prove, it is not enough to say that layout designed by table element may cause problem for screen readers, I must have example for my student to show them how and what problem it cause.
so it'll be great if i would have example of all possible barriers.
if there is any such website with examples let me know please.
Akram Danish
our eyes listen ~ our hand speaks
---------------------------------
Park yourself in front of a world of choices in alternative vehicles.
Visit the Yahoo! Auto Green Center.
From: Barthofer Michael
Date: Thu, May 31 2007 1:40AM
Subject: Re: Web accessiblity and barriers examples
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hello
W3C/WAI offers sample pages of an inaccessible website, that demonstrates accessibility barriers, an accessible version of the same site and an evaluation of the inaccessible site.
http://www.w3.org/WAI/EO/2005/Demo/Overview
yours
michael
-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
Von: = EMAIL ADDRESS REMOVED = [mailto: = EMAIL ADDRESS REMOVED = ] Im Auftrag von MUHAMMAD AKRAM
Gesendet: Donnerstag, 31. Mai 2007 09:24
An: = EMAIL ADDRESS REMOVED =
Betreff: [WebAIM] Web accessiblity and barriers examples
Hello,
is there any website that show example of web accessibilities and barriers? for example I can find many website that use fixed font that cannot be increase by view > text size option. so i can show that as an example and comparing with those accessible website that allowed text size control.
what am trying to do is collecting example to make prove, it is not enough to say that layout designed by table element may cause problem for screen readers, I must have example for my student to show them how and what problem it cause.
so it'll be great if i would have example of all possible barriers.
if there is any such website with examples let me know please.
Akram Danish
our eyes listen ~ our hand speaks
---------------------------------
Park yourself in front of a world of choices in alternative vehicles.
Visit the Yahoo! Auto Green Center.
From: Shadi Abou-Zahra
Date: Thu, May 31 2007 1:50AM
Subject: Re: Web accessiblity and barriers examples
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Hi,
Note that the WAI Before and After Demonstration is still a draft and
incomplete. It may serve the purpose of demonstrating a working example,
but the source code is still quite rough and may contain errors. We are
working on improving the Demo and will announce it once it is ready.
Regards,
Shadi
Barthofer Michael wrote:
> hello
>
> W3C/WAI offers sample pages of an inaccessible website, that demonstrates accessibility barriers, an accessible version of the same site and an evaluation of the inaccessible site.
>
> http://www.w3.org/WAI/EO/2005/Demo/Overview
>
> yours
> michael
>
> -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
> Von: = EMAIL ADDRESS REMOVED = [mailto: = EMAIL ADDRESS REMOVED = ] Im Auftrag von MUHAMMAD AKRAM
> Gesendet: Donnerstag, 31. Mai 2007 09:24
> An: = EMAIL ADDRESS REMOVED =
> Betreff: [WebAIM] Web accessiblity and barriers examples
>
> Hello,
>
> is there any website that show example of web accessibilities and barriers? for example I can find many website that use fixed font that cannot be increase by view > text size option. so i can show that as an example and comparing with those accessible website that allowed text size control.
>
> what am trying to do is collecting example to make prove, it is not enough to say that layout designed by table element may cause problem for screen readers, I must have example for my student to show them how and what problem it cause.
>
> so it'll be great if i would have example of all possible barriers.
>
> if there is any such website with examples let me know please.
>
> Akram Danish
> our eyes listen ~ our hand speaks
>
>
>
> ---------------------------------
> Park yourself in front of a world of choices in alternative vehicles.
> Visit the Yahoo! Auto Green Center.
>
From: Jukka K. Korpela
Date: Thu, May 31 2007 3:00AM
Subject: Re: Web accessiblity and barriers examples
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On Thu, 31 May 2007, MUHAMMAD AKRAM wrote:
> is there any website that show example of web accessibilities and
> barriers?
Just some millions of them - but it's often difficult to find examples
that demonstrate some particular problem well. Typically sites have
lots of problems, and it is difficult to estimate the impact of each of
them.
> what am trying to do is collecting example to make prove, it is not
> enough to say that layout designed by table element may cause problem
> for screen readers, I must have example for my student to show them how
> and what problem it cause.
Yes, we need to present examples. But table layout as such is not an
accessibility problem. Its effects depend on the browser and browsing
mode. If a browser cannot read the cells of a table in an order and reads
visually by text lines, then the result is awful, but I don't think such
browsers are used much any more.
Tables for layout are generally part of a larger problem of including too
much content, and too much repetitive content at that, on one page. Layout
tables make it possible, but so does CSS positioning. For example, if you
visit the Unesco page http://www.unesco.org page, you will probably find
it excessively complex, especially if you use a screen reader. Visually,
the page is somehow tolerable, since the different parts have been
presented as blocks with backgrounds or otherwise visually grouped. If you
have to listen to the page, it's more difficult to figure out the
structure behind it. But it has been implemented using CSS rathern than
layout table, and this doesn't make it any more accessible.
Sometimes layout tables have been used to that when linearized, the
content appears in a very messed-up order. For example, there might be two
lists presented as a table with two columns, so that when read
sequentially, you get alternatingly items from each list, completely
breaking the structure. That would be a problem caused specifically by
a layout table - a poorly designed one. But such constructs have become
less common and I haven't recently encountered an example of that.
--
Jukka "Yucca" Korpela, http://www.cs.tut.fi/~jkorpela/