[nfbcs] evaluation display of a web page

April Brown aprilbrownwrite at gmail.com
Sat Nov 2 21:04:43 UTC 2013


Ten years or so ago, I learned HTMl and attempted to code accessible 
from W3schools.  They do have Code check.  I don't think it's that 
good.  In the last year I have lost most of my vision, and much of my 
hearing, so it's even more important than ever!  And I always wanted to 
code accessible.  Though, knowing some varying issues, especially with 
vision, I'm not 100% sure it is possible to code for every variation.  I 
may be wrong.

Hi *Susan Stanzel,  It would be wonderful if programs on both ends could 
fix the issues to make websites more accessible.  And I agree.  I have 
tried to learn NVDA, and well, learning keyboard workarounds is ten 
times harder than HTML ever was!

Hi ***Mike Jolls - Since you evaluate websites for accessibility, can I 
ask you a question?  For the last few years, my author website has been 
on a Google site.  Are Google websites accessible?  I can change some of 
the coding, though much of what I think would need to be adjusted is not 
accessible to the page holders that I can find.

Thanks.  Still new to the world of mostly deaf and blind, and the screen 
readers that confuse me when they don't just work when I open the page.*

*





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