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Thread: Re[2]: Re[2]: Re[2]: Dayton Art Alternative Descriptions

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Number of posts in this thread: 4 (In chronological order)

From: Iain Harrison
Date: Tue, Nov 09 2004 9:26AM
Subject: Re[2]: Re[2]: Re[2]: Dayton Art Alternative Descriptions
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Tuesday, November 9, 2004, 4:17:26 PM, susan.rgrossman wrote:

> It was this article on the word content pronunciation through JAWS
> that had me altering my skip links recently to "Skip to Main Content"

Ah! Yet another Jaws defect. I do seem to keep on harping on about
this, but Jaws seems to do so many things badly: it's not even
cheap!


--

Iain

From: iain
Date: Tue, Nov 09 2004 10:03AM
Subject: Re[2]: Re[2]: Re[2]: Dayton Art Alternative Descriptions
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Tuesday, November 9, 2004, 4:17:26 PM, susan.rgrossman wrote:

> It was this article on the word content pronunciation through JAWS
> that had me altering my skip links recently to "Skip to Main Content"

Ah! Yet another Jaws defect. I do seem to keep on harping on about
this, but Jaws seems to do so many things badly: it's not even
cheap!


--

Iain

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From: Iain Harrison
Date: Wed, Nov 10 2004 10:50AM
Subject: Re[2]: Re[2]: Re[2]: Dayton Art Alternative Descriptions
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Wednesday, November 10, 2004, 5:40:02 PM, jkorpela wrote:

> If you ask me, the best way is to include one, two, or three key
> navigation links at the end of a page.

If you ask me, you get a different answer.


--

Iain

From: michael.brockington
Date: Thu, Nov 11 2004 5:10AM
Subject: Re: Re[2]: Re[2]: Re[2]: Dayton Art Alternative Descriptions
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> From: iain [mailto: = EMAIL ADDRESS REMOVED = ]
>
> Wednesday, November 10, 2004, 5:40:02 PM, jkorpela wrote:
>
> > If you ask me, the best way is to include one, two, or three key
> > navigation links at the end of a page.
>
> If you ask me, you get a different answer.
>

Probably for the first time, I have to agree with Jukka here. As a programmer
my technical knowledge normaly makes up for any lack of cognitive powers, but
for me one of the most important advances in browser technology recently has
been the tabbed interface. This is because it is _normal_ for me to find that
there is (far) more than one option that I want to follow on any given page,
so tabs allow me to follow them all. Users who don't have tabs, either
because they don't understand how to use them, or their equivalent, or don't
have an equivalent (in an assistive browser) are put at a serious
disadvantage by over-complicated navigation.

Basically, Complexity = Anxiety.

Mike


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