Web Accessibility Reports

Source Articles: WCAG Guidelines

These guidelines explain how to make Web content accessible to people with disabilities. The guidelines are intended for all Web content developers (page authors and site designers) and for developers of authoring tools. The primary goal of these guidelines is to promote accessibility. However, following them will also make Web content more available to all users, whatever user agent they are using (e.g., desktop browser, voice browser, mobile phone, automobile-based personal computer, etc.) or constraints they may be operating under (e.g., noisy surroundings, under- or over-illuminated rooms, in a hands-free environment, etc.). Following these guidelines will also help people find information on the Web more quickly. These guidelines do not discourage content developers from using images, video, etc., but rather explain how to make multimedia content more accessible to a wide audience. More

Article Summaries

  1. Clarify Natural Language Usage (WCAG 4) (19 Jan 08)
  2. Don't Rely On Color Alone (WCAG 2) (26 Jan 08)
  3. Ensure that documents are clear and simple (WCAG 14) (02 Feb 08)
  4. Provide context and orientation information. (WCAG 12) (09 Feb 08)
  5. Use W3C technologies and guidelines (WCAG 11) (16 Feb 08)
  6. Create tables that transform gracefully (WCAG 5) (23 Feb 08)
  7. Ensure user control of time-sensitive... (WCAG 7) (01 Mar 08)
  8. Ensure that pages featuring new technologies... (WCAG 6) (08 Mar 08)
  9. Design for device-independence. (WCAG 9) (15 Mar 08)
  10. Ensure direct accessibility of embedded... (WCAG 8) (22 Mar 08)