There are two things that has to be kept in mind by the person one who want his web site to be accessible the first thing is to be done is specification of the accessibility which is essential in the elements definition, and the second thing that has to be done is should arrange the site which should be tested for accessibility, the person should take more care about the first point it is not just accessibility of the site, compared to the first point the second is much more difficult because the person cannot define what needs to be tested and what are
Once with the great pace of development of the World Wide Web, a new important problem appears: how to make the Internet accessible for the people with disabilities?
As an answer to this question appeared the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines document, first version 1.0, and more recently the 2.0 version. It covers a great range of recommendations that would enable the Internet to be much more accessible. After following these recommendations from W3C, a wider range of people with disabilities, such as blindness and low vision,
As a real web development professional I won’t think also about this graphical tool called Flash would be accessible, by any means; Let me know or let me see how this graphical software is pirated and can be viewed by any of the viewer; What should this software require is some add – ons with the browser and logically not viewable to the user; This software is not yet have the options which can optimize or speed up the search engines or any findings for the software;
This graphical entity is in lieu with equivalent software and re-places the
"If you want your website to be accessible there are two things you absolutely have to do:
Specify that accessibility is essential in your requirements definition.
Arrange that the site is tested for accessibility.
The first requires a bit more than just saying "the site must be accessible" but there are lots of examples of such requirements and people who can help you write them.
However, the second is much more difficult because:
Defining what needs to be tested is complex: what disabilities, what functions, what assistive technology,
Maximum Accessibility: Making Your Web Site More Usable for Everyone Maximum Accessibility tells you how to make the World Wide Web more accessible and more usable for everyone, including over 600 million people around the world who have disabilities. That includes 54 million Americans (almost 6 million of whom are children) and 37 million people in Europe Bureau of the Census 1997; United Nations 2000. We've written Maximum Accessibility for Web designers, developers, and programmers who create complex, data-driven Web applications; full-time Web
W3C accessibility group released WCAG 2.0 Working Draft, the last call for reviewers to send their comments and suggestions on different issues for the new standard. The latest recommendation WCAG 1.0 was published on May 1999, and I think the 2.0 recommendation will be ready by end 2008 since there should be first a Candidate Recommendation then Proposed Recommendation before make it final.
Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 2.0 (WCAG 2.0) covers a wide range of issues and recommendations for making Web content more accessible. This document
Use WAI's guidelines to make your site accessible
To improve usability of Web sites for people with disabilities, one group has created guidelines for developers. See how these guidelines can help you develop a more usable product.Many developers don't realize that there is federal legislation that addresses accessibility standards for disabled individuals in the procurement and use of...
Compliance with the WAI Accessibility Guidelines is within reach
The Internet, through the interface of the World Wide Web, has become an important factor in