Sunday, September 10, 2006

Bull's Eye: Target not on target with web accessibility

this is an audio post - click to play

This item stretches over two posts.

It is not as cleaned up and polished as I'd have liked, but the blogging service has no rewind feature or pause feature. So I do the best I can without spending hours on the telephone recording audio content!

Today's posts concern web accessibility. I have found many websites to be tedious to use. Not necessarily inaccessible, but tedious. One is Wikipedia. I access it thru another site because the interface is simpler.

Amazon gives me fits because there is so much information on the screen and I have to use any number of shortcuts to attempt to get to the part of the page that has the information, often audio clips of CDs.

I have long wanted to use Match or True.com but hesitate because they seem intimidating.

I have been known to use Info Eyes to find something online that would simply take me entirely too long. I get very mentally fatigued sitting running thru websites, visiting links, and then remembering where I went.

Footnotes:

1. Law firms mentioned in the blogcast are as follows:

Disability Rights Advocates

Brown, Goldstein and Levy

Schneider and Wallace

2. Use of honorific academic titles.

I am given to understand that NFB head, Marc Maurer, who holds a law degree from Notre Dame, was awarded an honorary doctorate by a Northern California college. I seem to recall a mention of this in an issue of the Braille Monitor in the mid 1990s. I had always heard that those with honorary doctorates did not affix the title Dr. to their name; the title Dr. being reserved to those who pursued the Ph.D., MD, ND, OD, DVM, DDS., Ed.D., ... His immediate predecessor may have set the fashion. Wonder why?

3. Capitalization.

When a sentence begins with a website url, does one capitalize the first w? ex. www.loc.gov/nls contains bibliographic information on recorded books. or Www.loc.gov/nls contains bibliographic information on recorded books.

4. Fanfold Braille embosser paper.

Help! Can someone out there develop a Braille embosser that does not need to use fanfold, tractor feed paper? It drives me crazy. The separating of each sheet and the removing of the tractor feed strips causes me to often damage my printouts.

5. Comparison of efficiency of computer use between sighted and blind populations.

The article concluded with the following quote from Bruce Sexton, "I believe that millions of blind people like me can use the Internet just as easily as do the sighted, if websites are accessible." Seems like so many sites are getting more and more GUI and visual.

Beverley, C.A., Bath, P.A. & Barber, R. The Information
Behaviour of Visually Impaired People. JDOC Information Behaviour
special issue. In press

Parsons School of Design teacher, Manuel Lima, has constructed striking images that represent complexity....

6. Speaking of things Kurzweil, after reading Fantastic Voyage RC (59967) and beginning The Singularity Is Near (RC 61318), I wonder if medicine thru nanotech and genetic recoding will in the next decade or two make blindness vanish relegating it to books dealing with the history of disability.

7. NFB also pursued legal actions several years ago to force AOL to make its software blind-friendly.

8. One wonders if the verdict will be appealed by Target--Corporations usually appeal. Target has had every year in December a day set aside for the disabled to go and shop there without the hastle of other shoppers during the Christmas rush. Seems like there is a disconnect between the corporation's website policy and that of its physical stores. I sometimes think all this PC and multiculturalism has fragmented our society beyond repair. Seems like Arthur Schlessinger Jr. wrote a book about that in the early 90s.

IMAGINE That!