[stylist] Designing websites and assistive technology- justin

justin williams justin.williams2 at gmail.com
Sat Mar 22 16:14:47 UTC 2014


Its memory; assistive technology is not easy.  Neither is web designing;
what a great skill to have.  Learning assistive technology challenges many.
I've got to still learn the Bluetooth keyboard short cuts myself.  If you
need any jaws help, just ask.  

-----Original Message-----
From: stylist [mailto:stylist-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of April Brown
Sent: Saturday, March 22, 2014 11:45 AM
To: stylist at nfbnet.org
Subject: Re: [stylist] Designing websites and assistive technology- justin

Actually, learning to design websites is very similar to learning to use
assistive technology, or should be.  In fact, a lot of the terms used should
be the same (those little arrows to choose items in menus, and many more).

Biggest difference:  Webdesign has step by step training programs.  That I
found after I learned how to do it.

Assistive technology - it's a total guess.  There isn't even a dictionary
for terms.  It's like  - How do you open an email?  Try one of these 400
keyboard commands, and you may get lucky.  Otherwise, forget it.  We aren't
going to have a guide.  We don't want anyone to know how to use it.


April Brown

Writing dramatic adventure novels uncovering the myths we hide behind.

aprilbrownwrite at gmail.com

Website: https://sites.google.com/site/uncoveredmyths/
Twitter: http://twitter.com/UncoveredMyths Google Plus:
https://plus.google.com/116003267969710767555/posts



_______________________________________________
Writers Division web site
http://writers.nfb.org/
stylist mailing list
stylist at nfbnet.org
http://nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/stylist_nfbnet.org
To unsubscribe, change your list options or get your account info for
stylist:
http://nfbnet.org/mailman/options/stylist_nfbnet.org/justin.williams2%40gmai
l.com





More information about the Stylist mailing list