dai11y 22/12/2020

22 December 2020

iPhones can now automatically recognize and label buttons and UI features for blind users iOS 14 has a new feature, “Screen Recognition”, which is built into VoiceOver. It uses AI to detect interactable elements on the screen, even when such elements aren’t properly labelled / exposed to assistive technology. It has the potential to allow… [Read More]

week11y issue 55

21 December 2020

Apologies for the silence last week – I was having an early Christmas with my family! Your weekly frequent11y newsletter returns below: A plan for accessible maps Benjy Stanton describes how he would design a map service from the ground up, considering the needs of all users. Maps are inherently inaccessible – they require digital… [Read More]

dai11y 21/12/2020

21 December 2020

How we made GOV.UK more accessible A team on GOV.UK analysed a small subset of representative pages to identify any violations of the WCAG 2.1 AA standard. They prioritised each issue by its regularity / likelihood of occurrence and its impact on the user’s ability to use GOV.UK. These were either technical issues, content issues… [Read More]

dai11y 11/12/2020

11 December 2020

More Accessible Skeletons Adrian Roselli describes – quite late on in his blog post – why he thinks skeletons (placeholder areas to display to the user while content is loading) are a bad idea. But he also describes how he would build one if he had to. Some skeletons have aria-busy=”true” markup, which is designed… [Read More]

dai11y 10/12/2020

10 December 2020

Accessible Web Animation: The WCAG on Animation Explained Val Head gives a detailed overview of WCAG animation recommendations. These include: “Pause, Stop, Hide“: provide a way of pausing, stopping or hiding any autoplaying animation that lasts more than 5 seconds. “Three flashes or below threshold“: avoid flashing more than 3 times in a one second… [Read More]

dai11y 09/12/2020

09 December 2020

Here’s What It’s Like To Live With A Tracheostomy Ginny Butcher describes her experience of living with a tracheostomy (or ‘trache’): a tube in her neck, connected to a ventilator to enable her to breathe. She’s completed a master’s degree to become a lawyer, and has done many impressive things such as rock climbing, abseiling,… [Read More]

dai11y 08/12/2020

08 December 2020

A plan for accessible maps Benjy Stanton describes how he would design a map service from the ground up, considering the needs of all users. Maps are inherently inaccessible – they require digital and geographic literacy as well as visual methods of communication, so they should always be seen as an enhancement. Benjy’s tips can… [Read More]

fortnight11y issue 27

07 December 2020

What would an ethical overlay look like? Karl Groves writes about the ‘overlay widgets’ offered by companies such as accessiBe, and how their claim that including their product on your website will make it fully WCAG compliant is simply untrue. Many a11y issues, such as missing alt text, can only be fixed by a person…. [Read More]

week11y issue 54

07 December 2020

Accessibility Testing is like Making Coffee This article by Madalyn Parker was very popular back in August. Madalyn describes accessibility testing through different coffee brewing methods, with some nice illustrations. French Press is like automated testing: quick, easy, but doesn’t catch all of the grit. Aeropress, like semi-automated testing, is a step up from that,… [Read More]

dai11y 07/12/2020

07 December 2020

My watch told me I have a leak An AbilityNet article describes how Google’s Live Transcribe app, which turns speech into text for live conversations, can also be trained with non-voice data. An update to the app can now identify environmental sounds such as “crying baby”, “door knocking”, “smoke alarm”, or as the title suggests,… [Read More]

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