February 2022 Newsletter
Feature
Introducing the Accessibility IMpact (AIM) Score and Other WAVE Updates
WebAIM's new AIM score and service provides an inexpensive way to get automated and manual test data for your web site, plus a measure of accessibility impact for users with disabilities.
News
StrategicA11y - Virtual Strategic Web Accessibility Workshop
There's more to accessibility than HTML. Join us April 12-14 to learn how to foster an internal culture of accessible design and development holistically, at all levels of your organization.
Zoom Accessibility Workshop
Register for WebAIM's new hands-on training on creating and hosting accessible Zoom meetings to be held April 19.
WebAIM Virtual Training
Registration is open for WebAIM's next virtual web accessibility training to be held March 9-10.
Resources
The social model: do we disable people through our tech?
Do our society's design and tech choices actually cause disabilities? In this article, we honor Mike Oliver, discover the origins of the social model and dive deep into the role that we in tech play in perpetuating ableism.
No Accessibility Without Disabilities
People who are tasked with remediating accessibility often have little experience of how people with disabilities actually use the web. This leads to overcomplicated solutions, as they underestimate the capabilities of disabled people.
Support for Marking Radio Buttons Required, Invalid
How are required and invalid radio buttons indicated when they provide a single selection of an option within a set?
How to use the accessibility tree for a11y testing
The accessibility tree is a filter of the DOM that only shows accessibility-related info. It can be very useful for accessibility testing.
Comic Sans is a good typeface, actually
In my ongoing, inadvertent quest to alienate myself from the design industry, I must now tell you all that Comic Sans is a good typeface.
Foundations: colour and meaning
Colour is a valuable tool for communicating meaning. But if you can't see colour, then meaning is lost.
Quick Tip: Reserve underline for links
The use of underline to indicate linked text is a convention that stretches back to the birth of the web. As a result, the use of underline for emphasis in web-based documents may be confusing to some users. Bold or italics are better for indicating emphasis, though be careful with long sections of italics or ALL CAPS to avoid introducing readability issues.
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