Web accessibility not just morally sound – there are legal obligations as well Very large potential audience, consisting of web developers and business managers Very little competition to this book
This book is ideally intended for web developers, designers, software engineers, IT specialists, social organizations, governments, practitioners, researchers, academicians, and students in the usability and accessibility of websites for ...
Among many techniques, this guide will teach you how to: Add structure and meaning to your publications to make them more usable by accessible technologies Tailor EPUB Navigation Documents for readers requiring either full or reduced ...
This book is for all Web professionals looking for an intuitive route to adding dynamic content from databases to their sites, assuming only HTML. No theory; no philosophy – just techniques and solutions. For web professionals creating.
... websites was often higher than the accessibility of the website for the institution's SLIS, there were fluctuations in accessibility of both sites over the years (Comeaux & Schmetzke 2007, 2009). Findings for studies that examined ...
With this handbook, you’ll learn how to design or develop a site that conforms to Section 508 of the US Rehabilitation Act—and in the process you’ll discover how to provide a better user experience for everyone.
... sites? Ariadne (38). http://www.ariadne.ac.uk/issue38/alexander/ Alexander D, Rippon S (2007) University website accessibility revisited. In: Proceedings of AusWeb07. http://ausweb.scu.edu.au/aw07/papers/refereed/alexander/pa/per.html ...