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My goal is to produce websites that are highly usable
and highly accessible. The Internet should provide information and
communication resources for all people without exception. Web page
features designed to assist people with disabilities typically provide
benefits to everybody.
Standards
Compliance
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- All pages on this site are validated to satisfy AAA
and Section 508 standards using A-Prompt
software.
- All pages on this site use structured semantic
markup. H1 tags are used for main titles, H2 and H3 tags for subtitles.
For example, on this page, users of JAWS
screen reader software can skip to the next section within the
accessibility statement by pressing ALT+INSERT+3. Images used to make
special font titles are contained within H1 tags.
- Skipover links are provided to allow people using
screen readers to bypass large blocks of navigation links.
Navigation
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- Site organization and positional awareness are
provided via drop-down menu and signpost trail (breadcrumbs). Current
page position is indicated by converting navigation links into plain
text marked with asterisks, strong tags and em tags.
- All pages have top, home, search and map links to aid
navigation. Long pages have internal links to allow the reader to jump
down to the desired subsection or up to the top of the page.
- The site includes a search page and a site map.
- Text links are used for navigation. Dropdown menus
degrade acceptably to a list of text links on any system that does not
support Javascript.
- Link text was written to make sense out of context.
- Unvisited links are displayed in bold blue text.
Visited links are displayed in plain purple text.
- Links that jump from section to section within a page
allow the pages to be navigated with keyboard commands.
Images
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- All content images used in this site include
descriptive ALT attributes. Purely decorative graphics include null ALT
attributes.
- Complex images include LONGDESC attributes or inline
descriptions to explain the significance of each image to non-visual
readers.
Page Styles
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- Cascading style sheets are used to control the style
of the web pages. This allows people with special viewing requirements
to use their own style sheets when viewing the pages.
- If your browser or browsing device does not support
stylesheets at all, the content of each page is still readable.
- Page layout was done via tables because many people
still use versions of browser software that don't fully and uniformly
support CSS positioning methods.
- This site uses only relative font sizes, compatible
with the user-specified "text size" option in visual
browsers. Instructions
for text size adjustments.
- ?? Accessible
forms ??
References
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- This statement is based on the accessibility
statement from Dive
Into Accessibility.
- W3
accessibility guidelines explain the reasons behind each
guideline.
- U.S.
Section 508 accessibility guidelines.
- Member of Guild
of Accessible Web Designers.
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