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The web is about information accessibility
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It's really a basic human freedom that we
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are just really beginning to talk about in
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the last decade. It's important
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therefore that everybody have this freedom
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any freedom that's only allocated to a few
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is not really a freedom.
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The web is about information and it's
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important that people can access the
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information that they need in order to
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complete a workflow or get their job done
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finish a task.
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I think the web should be accessible to
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everyone all the time. I grew up with it
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being easily accessible to me. It's how
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I learnt information easily. I can't
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imagine someone not being able to just
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google something instantly, and getting
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what they need.
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I think websites should be accessible
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because...the web is founded kinda on this
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idea of sharing information and if you
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can't share information or if some people
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can't see it , then it's not truly being shared.
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We all have different abilities and
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disabilities, and if we're all going to be
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able to get the same content and interpret
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it in a somewhat similar fashion, it has
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to be given to us in that way and
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accessible so that we can actually reach
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it
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Accessibility is important for a number of
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reasons. For one, there are laws that
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apply.Another is, it can relate to our
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reputation. And a third is thatby paying
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attention to it, we create a more
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inclusive educational environment.
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I think we are really good as developers
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at being...focusing on the 80% case.
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Focusing on how do we make every 4 out of
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every 5 of our users happy. How do we
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build things for those group of people,
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because the last 20% is always hard. But I
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say that the web is for 100%. It's for
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everybody, which is what Tim Burners-Lee
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said.
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I'm definitely am very moved by this
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notion of inclusiveness. I mean I think
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that, for me it's a part of who I...
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this is important to me. But there's
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also just the sort of, the notion of
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of having everybody's contributions to the
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sort of...the knowledge.
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Big challenge is, to escape your own
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viewpoint. And to not make the assumption
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that everyone sees the web the way you see
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it, on the device you see, the way
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you use it. And so when you're creating
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web pages, that's the biggest challenge,
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is getting outside of where you're sitting.
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The biggest obstacle to accessibility,
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I think is...is pure knowledge.
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It's really about putting yourself in the
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mind of a person with disabilities.
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A person who has, who has no motor skills
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has no hands, has a lack of vision, has a
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lack of hearing. May have a
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cognitive disability. To be able to put
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yourselves in their shoes and understand
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how are they working with the thing that
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I'm building or designing right now,
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can they use it?
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The alternative is, you build something
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someone says "oh no it's not accessible!"
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and so you go back and try to fix it but
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you probably have been doing the wrong
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thing at many places you know you may
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have hundreds of images with no alt text,
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you may have navigation that's very confused
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or you are relying on libraries that...
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open internet explorer
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it's just that the technologies aren't
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going to figure out. And so that's
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when someone says, it's too much, too
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expensive, too much work. Well just do it
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from the beginning and it'll...it'll probably
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get a quality product with less work.
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Accessibility is important to incorporate
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earlier on because if you don't
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incorporate it early on, you will
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incorporate it later at greater expense,
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with a certain amount of time you don't
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have, with a certain amount of money you
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don't have, to try to make it better.
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Accessibility, unfortunately like
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everything else in design and web design
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has to be done from the very beginning.
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So whether you're designing for different
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devices, whether doing for different kinds
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of human abilities, all those things have
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to be thought of from the very beginning
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and built into your concept of what your
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your plan is. Of course nobody wants to
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take time at the end. We're almost there,
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we just want to get it out, and that's the
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mistake many of us make. It's like
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"I'll just get it out, then I'll go back and fix it."
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No. Doesn't ever happen. There's always
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a next project.
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The first step in getting an accessible
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site, is to work with the management, so
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they understand the value of making it
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accessible, and also helping them
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understand that we can do pretty
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much anything they want and be accesible.
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If you just talk about accessibility, it
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may not be immediately appreciated as
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something important to do. But if you
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start talking about quality and the
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overlap of search engine optimisation and
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accessibility and things of that nature
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that...that will tend to get people's
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attention more.
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When I started, I was a designer and I
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wanted to make things pretty. And you
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don't think about anything besides the
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aesthetics. And what I soon realised was
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that when you have something that works
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it already looks good, right, so that's
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where I started to move towards things
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being functional then the beauty came
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along after that.
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I don't believe that making a site
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accessible inhibits creativity. In fact
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I would argue it ..it helps creativity, it
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improves creativity.
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Good accessible design often closely
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relates to good usable design. And we
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found a really close parallel between good
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mobile design, mobile for mobile devices
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and the simplicity and clarity of good
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accessible design.
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Safari
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skip to primary content.
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In page link. Current Student. Future Student.
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Menu Item. Accessible Technology.
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So they are all inter-related
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and basically if you're making a really
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complicated site with lots of stuff on it.
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When you're doing, using different methods
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all over the place. You're probably
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not building that great a site anyway.
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The way we create websites today, has
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improved from 10 years ago. We're not
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using in-line styles, we're not only
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designing for 1 screen size. So the
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developers and designers are forced to
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design for every person and every device.
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We can't go backwards, we can't become
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limited again.
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Primarily what you can do as a designer
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to to check for accessibility is
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making sure that you have good headings.
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Good proper headings and headings
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structure good labels on inputs
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good labels on buttons and links
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so making sure you're using the right tags
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and the second best thing I would say,
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at least that I do are checking
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with the keyboard, just looking to see
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keyboard navigation, making sure there's
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you know there's good focus, indicators
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and that you don't get the focus trapped
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anywhere.
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The heart of the challenge in sort of
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the development world is that many
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developers you know look around and find
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open source libraries with really cool
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stuff. So they find ways to make things
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bounce across the screen, or make things
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get big and small and so on. And it just
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doesn't enter their mind to evaluate them
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for accessibility.
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When you're looking at a java script
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library or a content management system,
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piece of code that you would like to use,
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you need to look both at, does it do what
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you want for the web and does it also,
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is it also accessible? In other words,
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does it do it for you and for everybody.
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So as soon as you build something, you go
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back and you check it and check it over
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and over again. On multiple browsers, on
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multiple machines. You know I'll even call
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people you know overseas,and say "hey can
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you can you find it, can you check it, is
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it working for you? Oh ok good you know.
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And now they have tools out there where
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you can check on every single browser out
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there. In the past, that was really
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important, it still is. We have a few
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browsers out there, like a handful of
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browsers that we use, we need to check it
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on...on every possible system and platform.
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The best thing that you can do ultimately
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to check a design be it, checking for
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usability or accessibility is actually
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putting it in front of users and seeing if
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they can use it.
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You know, no matter how great your site is
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you know you may think you're hitting all
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the standards, then you watch someone go
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through it and you say well, wow they had
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...that didn't work out so well
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When I think of what a university does at
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it's core is to, not take everyone with
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very similar ideas and turn out people
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with the same ideas, but it's to benefit
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from a broad range of abilities and skills
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and different perspectives. And I see
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accessibility and disability as being a
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part of that spectrum.
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I think accessibility needs to be talked
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about more, it needs to be taught in
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the institution, in schools, it needs to
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be enforced in institutions and commercial
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environments.
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As new technology comes out, I think there
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will be some that just neglect it
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completely, and others that champion it.
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And the ones that champion it will be more
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user-friendly to everybody else, and they'll
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win in the marketplace.
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I think the future of the web is to
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be making fewer and fewer assumptions
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about how other people use it. We have
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mobile devices, we have screen readers,
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and we even have your web page or your
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content might be used by another machine
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so I think the fewer of the web is to
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continue making fewer and fewer
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assumptions and more universal content
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that is not restrictive or exclusive.
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I think it can be very challenging for a
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certain applications to serve people with disabilities
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but that's where the engineer needs to
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think about "why did I become an engineer"
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to make the impossible, possible, to solve
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big problems. And this is a big problem,
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so let's attack it, let's solve it.
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