Who needs an Accessible website ?
• Someone who cannot see well would want to hear or feel (via Braille or tactile graphics) an equivalent of the visual information • Someone who does not have the strength to move quickly or easily would want to use as little movement as possible and have as much time as they need when operating Web interfaces • Someone who does not read may want to hear the information read aloud • Online shopper with color blindness (user control of style sheets) • Reporter with repetitive stress injury (keyboard equivalents for mouse-driven commands; access-key) • Accountant with blindness (appropriate markup of tables, alternative text, abbreviations, and acronyms; synchronization of visual, speech, and braille display) • Classroom student with dyslexia (use of supplemental graphics; freezing animated graphics; multiple search options) • Retiree with aging-related conditions, managing personal finances (magnification; stopping scrolling text; avoiding pop-up windows) • Supermarket assistant with co