Contact the organizations for visually impaired people, read W3 accessibility guidelines, and make sure the site works as far as possible. If anyone likes to nag on the browser folks for a better accessibility solution - fine - but fix the skins _now_ and don't wait for some future solution.
Thanks, thats all from me.
John
On Fri, Mar 2, 2012 at 8:19 PM, Daniel Friesen lists@nadir-seen-fire.com wrote:
That's what browser preferences are for. NOT website preferences.
A lot of work has gone into technologies that allow browsers to display the same page in different ways to allow the people with different accessibility issues that conflict with each other to read the same content.
The moment you're trying to do 'accessibility' by means of a preference for your website, you are no longer doing accessibility. Accessibility is not a site preference, it's a fact that applies to the user browsing the entire Internet. Accessibility is not fixed if the user has to change a preference at every single website they visit.
On Fri, 02 Mar 2012 00:56:27 -0800, John Erling Blad jeblad@gmail.com wrote:
You can not design for one size fits all when it comes to accessibility, its simply not possible.
John
On Fri, Mar 2, 2012 at 4:03 AM, Daniel Friesen lists@nadir-seen-fire.com wrote:
Accessibility should not be a user preference.
I also do not like the idea of site specific text size change widgets: http://webaim.org/blog/web-accessibility-preferences-are-for-sissies/
If you want, I can even dig up the full discussion I had with CCA that ended in them dropping the text resize widget from their wiki's design ;).
On Thu, 01 Mar 2012 15:19:48 -0800, John Erling Blad jeblad@gmail.com wrote:
What about adding a couple of style markers on the body tag? For example classes for "high-contrast", "avoid-red-green", "avoid-green-blue", "avoid-red-yellow"... or?
Or perhaps as additional styles stright from the mediawiki-space, that way the accessability issues can be crowdsourced?
There was also a question about scaling of content text on OTRS some time ago. I'm not quite sure but I think the idea was to use an other font in the content as he had to read that, while all the other text from the portlets he learned over time so if that text was difficult to read it didn't do so much.
The text size proposal was to add simple scaling buttons to step up the text, and I would propose to store the set size in local storage. The same applies to color I believe, as it should be possible to change it without logging in.
At nowp there is a link in the sidebar to a page describing how visually impaired can chage skin. It uses the simpleskin
http://no.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Svaksynte&useskin=si...
John
On Thu, Mar 1, 2012 at 10:50 PM, Brandon Harris bharris@wikimedia.org wrote:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lorem_ipsum
On 3/1/12 1:43 PM, David Gerard wrote:
On 1 March 2012 21:38, Trevor Parscaltparscal@wikimedia.org wrote:
> Screenshot of new diff styles: > https://bugzilla.wikimedia.org/attachment.cgi?id=10148
I gotta ask - where's the lorem ipsum from?
- d.
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