massivearticlelist.com
  Site Home :> About Us :> Place Your Link :> Privacy of Info :> Terms & Conditions :> Add Article
Search:   
 
 

Wordpress Knocks Out Google's Blogger In Building Niche Blogs

When it comes to building and creating profit pulling niche blogs (niche sites) Wordpress really shi ... - Brandon Hong
 

What If?

What if, What if, What if. This question comes at us every day. What if I said this, What if I did t ... - Robert Williams
 

The Right Approach

If I told you I would give you a part time job where you would be able to set your own hours, work f ... - John Hostler
 
 

Linking Your Way To The Top Of The Search Engines

One of the most important things you can do to raise your search engine rankings and drive more traf ... - Dan Rosenfield
 

New Medium, New Rules

Life is thought to have begun on Earth somewhere around three billion years ago, and of all the spec ... - Dave Collins
 
 

Site Home –› Internet & Computers –› Website Development
 

Website Accessibility

 

Author: Dan Moore

Website Accessibility

Having an accessible website is not just a nicety, but a must have. Although there are still issues with inconsistent display of content across browsers, matters are much better than they have been in the past. This means that there is no excuse not to bear in mind accessibility when creating and updating your site.

Here are some accessibility tips to bear in mind whilst creating your site:

Navigation

You should resist the temptation to use images or Flash for links on your site, and rather use text based links. This helps with accessibility, search engine spidering and ensures that navigation links can be traversed using the tab key as well as the mouse. The ability to use the keyboard to move around the site is an important accessibility requirement to ensure those who cannot use a mouse for a variety of reasons are not disadvantaged by your site.

Alt Tags

Ensure all images have alt tags - or alternative text - attached to them. This is a key accessibility requirement, to ensure that those who cannot view images, or choose to browse without images, can view all of your site without disadvantage. Alt tags should be descriptive and relevant to each image, rather than generic or used as a place to stuff keywords that are irrelevant to the image. Keep them sort and to the point - if the image is of a man parachuting, then label it as 'man parachuting'. There is no need to prefix with the word 'image:' as many text to speech browsers will add this automatically, thus the listener will here 'image image' if you also insert the word image!

Flash

When it comes to accessibility, one of the biggest barriers can be Flash. Flash must therefore only be used sparingly and only to add nice to have touches rather than important content. As well as being slow to load, Flash is often stripped out by firewalls or switched off in the web browser. The accessibility of Flash content is very poor as it is impossible for a search engine to know what a Flash banner is displaying. Therefore use Flash with caution.

Colours

Be sensible with your colour scheme! Ensure that you use colours that go well together and are easy on the eye. Therefore don't use colours that clash, are too similar or too light to be read easily on screen. There are tools you can use to see how your colour scheme will look to those with various types of colour blindness - well worth checking out.

Font sizing

Ensure that if possible you do not fix the font size, but rather allow site visitors to adjust font size as per their requirements - either making it larger and easier to read, or perhaps even smaller. Therefore don't set absolute pixel sizing in your style declarations.

In summary be considerate for your whole audience, who will also be using a variety of browsers and monitors to view your site. It is therefore well worth running your site through a text only browser such as Lynx to see how it displays there, and also run your code through a code validator to ensure that any mistakes are ironed out before you go live.

Author Bio:
Dan Moore is a champion in this field. Dan has written several articles in the past on this topic.
You can also reach this article by using: Website Accessibility, Internet & Computers, Website Development, web site development
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Review of Popular Wireless Headphones
 
How to Get Hundreds of One-Way Links Pointing to Your Website -- For Free
 
The Importance of Blogging
 
Error Messages Matter, Make No Mistake About It
 
People Getting Rich Online - Viral Marketing
 
Cisco CCNA Exam Tutorial: CCNA Recertification Requirements
 
Building A New Website In PHP
 
HDTV - High Definition Television
 
Internet Marketing Strategies
 
Tips On Increasing Your Newsletter Subscribers
 
 
 
Add Url
 
 

Children & Teens

 

Employment & Careers

 

Policies & Law

 

Automotive

 

Online & Indoor Games

 

People & Communities

 

Food & Recipe

 

Shopping & Auction

 

Banking & Finance

 

Garden & Home

 

Art & Creative

 

Lifestyle & Fashion

 

Companies & Business

 

Science & Research

 

News & Events

 

Outdoor & Sports

 

Internet & Computers

 

Healthcare & Medicine

 

Realty & Property

 

Self Help

 

Music & Entertainment

 

Tour & Travel

 

Education & Learning

 

Hygiene & Health

 
Site Home :> Privacy of Info :> Terms & Conditions
© 2006-2008 www.massivearticlelist.com All Rights Reserved Worldwide.