Useful accessibility resources

A whoooole bunch of links about inclusive design, gathered together from a presentation.

Tagged with

Related links

Developing an alt text button for images on my website | James’ Coffee Blog

I like the idea of adding this to personal websites:

Mastodon shows an “Alt” button in the bottom right of images that have associated alt text. This button, when clicked, shows the alt text the author has written for the image.

Tagged with

Tagged with

80 / 20 accessibility · marcus.io

So my observation is that 80% of the subject of accessibility consists of fairly simple basics that can probably be learnt in 20% of the time available. The remaining 20% are the difficult situations, edge cases, assistive technology support gaps and corners of specialised knowledge, but these are extrapolated to 100% of the subject, giving it a bad, anxiety-inducing and difficult reputation overall.

Tagged with

The Web Accessibility Cookbook

Manu’s book is available to pre-order now. I’ve had a sneak peek and I highly recommend it!

You’ll learn how to build common patterns written accessibly in HTML, CSS, and JavaScript. You’ll also start to understand how good and bad practices affect people, especially those with disabilities.

Tagged with

Home - Sa11y

Another handy accessibility testing tool that can be used as a bookmarklet.

Tagged with

Related posts

Accessibility is systemic

The difference between inclusive design and accessibility.

Alt writing

Aiming for originality and creativity in alt text.

Even more writing on web.dev

Five more articles on modern responsive design to close out the course.

Accessibility

Making the moral argument.

The Weight of the WWWorld is Up to Us by Patty Toland

A presentation at An Event Apart Chicago 2019.