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Microsoft MVP

 

Accessibility? Do we need to spend the extra money?

 
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BobbyDouglas

 

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Accessibility? Do we need to spend the extra money? - 4/8/2005 11:12:19   
For those who are not familiar with accessibility in web design, here is a link that contains information regarding the disability types & what we can do: http://www.webaim.org/techniques/

Does anyone spend extra money to follow this idea of making a site accessible for everyone?

A man using a screen reader sued an airline company because he could not see the posted fare. His fault? Or the airline's fault? http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,55708,00.html?tw=wn_story_related

How far are we supposed to take this?

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jaybee

 

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RE: Accessibility? Do we need to spend the extra money? - 4/8/2005 11:13:30   
If you were blind how far would you want it taken?

As far as the airline issue goes, how the hell can it be his fault????! In this country that is completely illegal and he would not only be within his rights to sue but he would win. The Disability Discrimination act states that commercial web sites must be accessible so that disabled people can do exactly the same things as able bodied.

The Olympic committee in 2000 were successfully sued to the tune of £20,000 for an inaccessible site. Two of our large supermarkets were sued when blind users could not successfully do their shopping online.

< Message edited by jaybee -- 4/8/2005 11:25:22 >


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Taz

 

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RE: Accessibility? Do we need to spend the extra money? - 4/8/2005 11:42:12   
Even in a PC world (Politically correct not the store) you can't please or cater for everyone, though doing your best to try and suit as many needs as possible should be enough. If you can show or it is obvious you tried catering for as many as possible you should be safe legally.

We all know there is always going to be someone or a few people who have issues with a site and how it doesn't display this or that, if the trend continues and the laws get much tougher, we will end up spending a life time developing one site cos we are forever having to scrap it and start again to make a few people able to access/view it.

Don't get me wrong, I am all for professional business sites catering for those with impairments/disabilities, but you can see where it is going to head eventually, "Man who cannot read sues such and such for XX amount".

Or we will end up with a net full of sites that are just simple text and nothing else because of all the legal issues so everyone gets treated the same and there can be no issues over accesibility.:)

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jaybee

 

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RE: Accessibility? Do we need to spend the extra money? - 4/8/2005 12:51:35   
quote:

"Man who cannot read sues such and such for XX amount".


Different case entirely. The example Bobby D gave was for a man who couldn't access Southwest Airlines' website to make a reservation because it wasn't accessible to his screen reader and therefore was unable to take advantage of special prices only available online.

The example of someone who can't read doesn't wash, Either they can't be bothered to learn, there are mountains of free courses in the UK to help them (Gremlins) or they have have a disability and would be using a screen reader.

Like I said above, if you lost your sight I'm sure you'd be unhappy with the fact you couldn't access things, especially when you know that it's entirely possible to make a site accessible if only webmasters and clients weren't too lazy or dismissive to do something about it.

quote:

we will end up with a net full of sites that are just simple text


Rubbish. You can design perfectly acceptable sites with plenty of graphics. If they're for decoration only then you ignore them if they contain useful info you use the alt and title or longdesc tags.

Flash is being made accessible and if all else fails then you make a text only version for the readers.

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Taz

 

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RE: Accessibility? Do we need to spend the extra money? - 4/8/2005 12:59:19   
That was just an extreme example and you know someone will try and pull that stunt, we live in the sue now get cash soon after culture sadly.
:)

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Donkey

 

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RE: Accessibility? Do we need to spend the extra money? - 4/8/2005 13:09:17   
Why the blanket rules though. Surely there are some sites which are never visited by blind people because they would have no interest in them. For instance a site selling tightrope walking equipment. Why should that site be forced to confirm to rules just to keep everybody equally accessible. I think it seems a bit patronising. This is the nanny state writ large AFAIC.

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jaybee

 

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RE: Accessibility? Do we need to spend the extra money? - 4/8/2005 13:14:00   
quote:

you know someone will try and pull that stunt


Maybe but the law is a disability law. If they're not disabled then it doesn't apply.

If you accept that as a case then we're all doomed to develop sites for people who are too thick to to read the site properly as well. I have a site about a venue that existed from 1960 - 1979. It says quite clearly that it is a tribute site. The header says 1960 - 1979. The history pages clearly state that it was knocked down in 1980. That still didn't stop some women sending me a booking for her birthday and getting really nasty when I told her the place wasn't there any more.

You can't cater for the lazy or stupid. You can cater for disabled people.

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jaybee

 

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RE: Accessibility? Do we need to spend the extra money? - 4/8/2005 13:15:40   
quote:

For instance a site selling tightrope walking equipment.


And if you are blind but your son is a gifted acrobat and you decide to buy him a tightrope for his birthday? You're not allowed to go on the site to order one because you wouldn't be able to use it? That's crazy.

quote:

they would have no interest in them


How do you know what blind people are interested in?

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Taz

 

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RE: Accessibility? Do we need to spend the extra money? - 4/8/2005 13:18:05   
quote:

ORIGINAL: Donkey

Why the blanket rules though.

This is the nanny state writ large AFAIC.


This was what I meant by all sites would end up being text only, kind of like collective punishment, if person A can't do or use something, then Person B, C and D must have it a certain way so everyone is equal.

It's always the way, people upstairs in charge can't work it out so a fair way is viable or they fear being caught in that un PC trap and their arses are on the line instead of ours, so they make it so no one can complain cos everything is the same no matter which person (A, B, C or D) you are.


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dpf

 

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RE: Accessibility? Do we need to spend the extra money? - 4/8/2005 13:20:37   
my hearing has deteriorated to the point where i cannot hear on a telephone without an amplifier attachment - should I be accomadated by requiring such attachment on all public telephones?

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jaybee

 

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RE: Accessibility? Do we need to spend the extra money? - 4/8/2005 13:20:41   
Taz You obviously didn't read the last part of my post.

quote:


quote:

we will end up with a net full of sites that are just simple text



Rubbish. You can design perfectly acceptable sites with plenty of graphics. If they're for decoration only then you ignore them if they contain useful info you use the alt and title or longdesc tags.

Flash is being made accessible and if all else fails then you make a text only version for the readers.




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jaybee

 

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RE: Accessibility? Do we need to spend the extra money? - 4/8/2005 13:22:13   
quote:

should I be accomadated by requiring such attachment on all public telephones?


Over here there is a loop system provided or you can get an aid from the NHS.

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dpf

 

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RE: Accessibility? Do we need to spend the extra money? - 4/8/2005 13:25:03   
but is it available on any corner phone that i walk up to?

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jaybee

 

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RE: Accessibility? Do we need to spend the extra money? - 4/8/2005 13:25:32   
quote:

It's always the way, people upstairs in charge can't work it out


Isn't it more a case of the webmaster can't work it out so disabled people can get lost?

It is not difficult to get a site to comply with level 1 which is what the law requires. If you can't get it to that level then you shouldn't be in business.

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Taz

 

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RE: Accessibility? Do we need to spend the extra money? - 4/8/2005 13:25:58   
quote:

ORIGINAL: dpf

but is it available on any corner phone that i walk up to?


Most public phones have it, I believe.

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Donkey

 

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RE: Accessibility? Do we need to spend the extra money? - 4/8/2005 13:27:18   
quote:

And if you are blind but your son is a gifted acrobat and you decide to buy him a tightrope for his birthday?
You got me there. I always thought acrobats bought there own tightropes for safety reasons.

I was hoping you'd say that you knew many blind tightrope walkers.:)

I saw one on TV once he said that the big advantage in being blind was that you never suffer from vertigo.

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jaybee

 

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RE: Accessibility? Do we need to spend the extra money? - 4/8/2005 13:28:03   
quote:

but is it available on any corner phone that i walk up to?


No not every one, that's why the NHS provide people with hearing disabilities with an aid they can carry with them.

This law does not state that every site must have this this and that. It states that you should make it accessible to a certain level or provide an option.

The NHS provide an option of a portable aid. You only have to ask for it.

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jaybee

 

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RE: Accessibility? Do we need to spend the extra money? - 4/8/2005 13:29:44   
quote:

I always thought acrobats bought there own tightropes for safety reasons.


:) You mean if someone else bought it and they fell off they might sue?

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Taz

 

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RE: Accessibility? Do we need to spend the extra money? - 4/8/2005 13:37:46   
quote:

ORIGINAL: jaybee

quote:

It's always the way, people upstairs in charge can't work it out


Isn't it more a case of the webmaster can't work it out so disabled people can get lost?

It is not difficult to get a site to comply with level 1 which is what the law requires. If you can't get it to that level then you shouldn't be in business.


Not at all to the first, as I said, I am all for accesible websites. As I mentioned above.

As for the second, that all depends what the requirements are for the site that the company wants surely?
(Let's remember here, half these companies do not even know they are supposed to have a site that is workable for impaired/disabled users, if it wasn't for the good Webmasters/Designers telling them.)
Or are you that uber confident and skilled you can do utterly everything anyone could ever want and you can get it working on every level at every requirement for every law.... So everyone with any condition, disability and tool to surf with can play on a level field.

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jaybee

 

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RE: Accessibility? Do we need to spend the extra money? - 4/8/2005 13:51:57   
quote:

It is not difficult to get a site to comply with level 1 which is what the law requires


Level 1 is very basic and you should be able to do that no matter what the requirements of the company.

I try to get a minumum of level 2. Some things are impossible to get a level 3 but the law doesn't require level 3.

I think there is a basic misunderstanding. Nobody is saying that all features on a commercial site have to be made accessible. What they are saying is that you cannot disadvantage a disabled person.

If you are offering something on your commercial site then it has to be available to all, it doesn't have to be available by exactly the same method. So a flashy purchasing option is fine but if it can't be made accessible then you offer an alternative route, text based if you have to.

< Message edited by jaybee -- 4/8/2005 14:00:12 >


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womble

 

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RE: Accessibility? Do we need to spend the extra money? - 4/8/2005 15:08:01   
My pet subject!!!

First of all I thought the site Bobby D put a link for was great, though being a site about accessibility I was disappointed that it didn't have a facility to increase the text size as I've found some that do. Not everyone with visual problems uses screen readers or their own stye sheets. BTW, the RNIB Good Design) site is a good source of info on accessibility, and also has a section on web accessibility. Also, a point to note about hearing not mentioned on the WebAIM site; many profoundly Deaf people who are sign language users whose first language is sign language have poor language skills. It's said that profoundly deaf children leave school with an average reading age of eight, not because they are unintelligent, but because deafness is still a barrier to learning. Any information that's provided in a format that doesn't use plain English, not just websites, will be inaccessible to many profoundly Deaf people.

quote:

His fault? Or the airline's fault?


Now we're into the social versus medical model of disability, and I would say most definitely the airline's. An except from a leaflet I produced for the organisation I do voluntary work for that explains how the two models can be applied to deafness:

quote:


The medical model of disability
It’s natural to think of disability in terms of the individual and how it affects them. This is the traditional way of looking at disability, the medical model of disability. The individual has a medical problem. The individual needs medical help. The individual needs specific help so that they can do things. The medical model looks at causes, symptoms and cures, and often doesn’t take account of the whole person. Disabled people's inability to join in society is seen as a direct result of having an impairment and not as the result of features of our society which can be changed.

For Ddeaf people, hearing loss is classified by the level of hearing loss according to set medical criteria of units of dBHL (decibels and hearing loss). This is the medical model of disability at work.. Emphasis is on classifying that person’s hearing loss and ‘fixing’ it, for example by giving them hearing aids.

In some ways though deafness is unique in that giving someone a hearing aid doesn’t instantly make them 'hearing' in the same way that giving someone who is short-sighted glasses gives them near normal vision. As any hearing aid user will tell you, hearing aids do not give you perfect hearing and only boost, or amplify, your remaining hearing. And what about profoundly deaf people for whom hearing aids don’t help?
The medical model focuses on the individual and what is medically wrong with them, and what can be done to correct the ‘impairment’. The medical model of disability though can make people feel inferior. Deafness is seen as a limitation, using negative phrases such as ‘hearing impaired’. But what does disabled mean? That a Ddeaf person can’t do everything that other people do? The only thing that Ddeaf people can’t do is hear.

The social model of disability
So is there another way of looking at disability? The social model of disability promotes a more positive image. It doesn’t focus on the individual, but on society. The only thing a Ddeaf person can’t do is hear. It’s society’s lack of provision for Ddeaf people that makes them disabled and prevents them from participating equally with hearing people. With the social model, a Ddeaf person is disabled because they can’t for example access the arts. The solution is simple – for example making all theatres accessible by the use of induction loops, captioning and signing.
The fact that not all public places like banks, shops, hospitals…in fact all the places which we all have to visit in our everyday life, have induction loops or that few service providers have staff who can sign makes doing everyday things such a struggle – not the fact that someone is Ddeaf. All Ddeaf people can make their own list of barriers they encounter.


quote:


all sites would end up being text only, kind of like collective punishment, if person A can't do or use something, then Person B, C and D must have it a certain way so everyone is equal.


And why shouldn't everyone be equal? Like jaybee says, no-one's saying accessible sites can't have graphics, that's what the alt and title or longdesc tags are for.

quote:

but is it available on any corner phone that i walk up to?


In the UK all public phones must have an inductive coupler. Obviously though that only helps if you have hearing aids with a 'T' switch.

quote:

(Let's remember here, half these companies do not even know they are supposed to have a site that is workable for impaired/disabled users, if it wasn't for the good Webmasters/Designers telling them.)


Ignorance is not an acceptable defence. The DDA has only been on the statute for 10 years, since 1995. If after 10 years they've not realised that their web presence is used to access their service,product, whatever, "access to goods, facilities and services" as the DDA puts it, then IMO they've only themselves to blame if they get sued.

I think generally the point is that you don't have to spend an awful lot of money to make a site accessible. The point is that accessibility isn't an optional add-on. It's something that has to be considered before you even go anywhere near a computer and start designing a site. Webmasters, designers, and their clients (probably most of all their clients) need to realise that there are things you need to consider before you do anything else, consider the colour scheme you're going to use, how you're going to lay out the information, what sort of language you're going to use, etc.

I've seen it from both sides of the fence. Some years ago when I was working as a PA for a management consultant I was organising a conference, and I knew that one of the attendees was deaf. I'd had dealings with this woman before and she'd complained that I hadn't booked a separate room for group discussions as it would make it easier for her if her group was somewhere quieter, rather than in the main hall. I was trying to economise because we were going over budget, and having to book the extra room to keep her happy sent me over budget. At the time I couldn't see what the big deal was. Over the past 4 years, having lost some sight and hearing due to a neurologiscal condition, I now realise what the big deal was. I've been in similar situations myself and I know it's not much fun when you can't hear what's going on around you.

Just because I now have disabilities doesn't mean I don't still want to do the things I could do before. Yes, there are certain things that aren't possible, but in many cases the things I can't do are because people haven't considered the needs of disabled people.

We do live in an increasingly litiguous society, but, for the vast majority of disabled people who end up resorting to court action, it's because all other methods have failed, and it's the only way to try and stop the discrimination that disabled people face on a daily basis, through no fault of their own.

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BobbyDouglas

 

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RE: Accessibility? Do we need to spend the extra money? - 4/8/2005 15:45:19   
Great discussion!

Rachel, I have some questions from the dark side.
- How come MSN (and every other large corp) does not abide to these accessibility standards?
- Why should I spend time/money making my site accessible, if the turn around does not make it worth it?
- Why build websites for all legacy browsers, Netscape 3.2, MSIE 4.0, etc. ?
- Why do only some of the walk/stop signals at crosswalks have sounds? And others do not? Maybe it is because it isn't worth the time?

From the business world, the rate of return plays one of the biggest roles in determining what is done. If it is not worth it to make the investment, why waste the money?

I could spend $100 extra on my site, and bring in one extra user every month. Or I could spend $200 on my site, and bring in one user who has a disibility.

I kind of have the opposite view as Rachel, but I'm more than happy to have a good discussion on it.

I think a lot of people are not educated enough on the issue. One thing for sure is that past experience plays a very important role when taking a side with the accessibility issue.

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dpf

 

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RE: Accessibility? Do we need to spend the extra money? - 4/8/2005 15:49:35   
quote:

all sites would end up being text only
would it be a feasible compromise to create a text only version of a site to truly focus on accessiblity? would that do the trick?

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BobbyDouglas

 

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RE: Accessibility? Do we need to spend the extra money? - 4/8/2005 16:07:34   
That wouldn't work. I honestly do not see a workable solution to this issue.

Imagine trying to put a text only version of large websites, that just is not reasonable. Some people have browsers that will display only the text.. so that is something extra they could always do.

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Giomanach

 

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RE: Accessibility? Do we need to spend the extra money? - 4/8/2005 19:55:49   
You're asking: How much money will this let me make?
You should be asking: How much will I be paying when taken to court?

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RE: Accessibility? Do we need to spend the extra money? - 4/8/2005 20:18:21   
I emphasise with both sides of the argument, like dpf I'm a bit mutton (caused by playing in a 3rd rate rock band for several years) but it's not enough for me to need any special consideration yet. However in the UK we are quick to categorise even the slightest disability and make special provisions for the disabled person that in some cases are not necessary.

For instance my late father for the last few years of his life was awarded an orange disabled sticker so he could park virtually anywhere without paying. His "disability" was a slight heart murmur that he had since before world war two. It never caused him any problems whatsoever and he only found out about it on a routine check up in the 1980's when they cross checked he finally knew why he wasn't allowed to join the army at the start of WW2 (classified unfit). But he had lived most of his life without noticing anything. Whenever he got out of his car he affected a slight limp so he wouldn't feel so guilty.

I think we are in danger of the same sort of thing happening on line, the majority finding they are de-prioritised in favour of the psuedo-disabled people like someone with very slight colour blindness.

At the other extreme how far do you go in catering for disability, there must inevitably be a point beyond which access is infeasible. For instance if I were totally blind and profoundly deaf how could I be given equal access to any web site? So once you recognise that there is a limit to this, who decides where the limit is set? It is all very well trying for "universal access" but the economic considerations cannot be ignored. This all has a price, and someone has to pay for it.

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BobbyDouglas

 

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RE: Accessibility? Do we need to spend the extra money? - 4/8/2005 20:28:41   
You should be asking: How much will I be paying when taken to court?
- I haven't seen a single accessibility lawsuit that I didn't think was frivilous. I haven't seen many to begin with, but not one that I thought was reasonable.



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RE: Accessibility? Do we need to spend the extra money? - 4/8/2005 23:13:11   
quote:

At the other extreme how far do you go in catering for disability, there must inevitably be a point beyond which access is infeasible.


I think that's true and I think that that's what the laws are trying to do; to delineate between necessary and unnecessary access issues. I don't think it's unnecessary to require you to add proper alt-text to your site but it is unnecessary to require you to go to every deafblind persons home and fingerspell into their hand your entire site.

As a counselor at a Center for Independent Living and a person with a physical disability myself (Friedreich's Ataxia), I see the negative impact that poorly designed websites have on people with disabilities every day. As has been said about accessibility, it's not that difficult to implement. We should do it because it's the right thing to do not simply to avoid lawsuits, however I'd be naive if I said that is probably not what's on most CEO's minds when they consider disability and web accessibility.

Tony

(in reply to Donkey)
jaybee

 

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RE: Accessibility? Do we need to spend the extra money? - 4/9/2005 6:14:16   
quote:

I haven't seen a single accessibility lawsuit that I didn't think was frivilous


How about the blind woman who found it incredibly difficult to actually get to the shops but was unable to do her shopping online? Is that frivolous?

I also don't think that the example you gave above of the airline is frivolous. Why should the guy have to pay full whack or get someone sighted to do it for him?

People with disabilities, especially severe disabilities, are often housebound and look on the internet as their way of getting to the outside world. Apart from the moral standpoint, businesses need to realise that not making sites accessible is losing them custom.

Donkey gave the example of the tightrope and sites that blind people wouldn't want to go to. I had exactly the same comment from a client about his sports car site. I made it accessible to level 1 as part of the design process anyway. When I spoke to him a while later he thanked me as an ex-racing driver who had crashed and due to a head injury, lost his sight, had got in touch with him to thank him for his great website that allowed him to keep in touch with his first love of fast cars.

That guy now refers all his contacts through the site and the owner has taken on extra admin staff as he can't keep up.

Excuse the pun, but it's short-sighted to look at the immediate issue. You have to look at where it can lead as in the example above.

quote:

For instance if I were totally blind and profoundly deaf how could I be given equal access to any web site?


They have braille readers that work in exactly the same way as text readers except they produce dots.

quote:

Imagine trying to put a text only version of large websites


If you design with accessibility in mind in the first place you only need to do a text based version for things you can't make accessible any other way. However, I have seen many large sites that do have text alternatives.

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Now where did I put that Doctype?

(in reply to Non-Profit)
Donkey

 

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Joined: 11/13/2001
From: Blackfield United Kingdom
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RE: Accessibility? Do we need to spend the extra money? - 4/9/2005 6:34:12   
OK so I admit defeat on this matter.

What do you reccomend as the minimum requirement and is there a universally recognised validation system? I notice you use bobby on your own site, is that the one to go for, or what about w3c's WAI?

Is there a WAI validation page? I couldn't find one on a quick search.

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I have a higher and grander standard of principle than George Washington. He could not lie; I can, but I won't.
Samuel Clemens

(in reply to jaybee)
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