Web Accessibility
What is web accessibility?
Web accessibility is a set of rules, behaviors, code standards, and design guidelines that ensure people
with disabilities, who comprise 20% of the world’s population, can use websites effectively.
To achieve this, the W3C (The World Wide Web Consortium) has created the Web Content
Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG 2.1), for direction on how to make websites accessible. These guidelines have been adopted by governments around the world and have been incorporated into various legislations such as the ADA, Section 508, and EN 301549.
The WCAG focuses chiefly on three areas of accessibility: 1) blind people using screen readers (e.g.JAWS, NVDA). 2) people with motor impairments who only use keyboards, and 3) a variety of other disabilities, including color blindness, epilepsy, and minor visual impairments that mostly concern the Ul and design of the website (color contrasts, animations, fonts, etc.)
Why Use Accessibility?
accessWidget’s interface is a session-based design and UI adjustment tool that makes accessibility
modifications based on a user’s individual needs. All adjustments are compliant with WCAG 2.1 AA
requirements.
accessWidget’s AI machine learning technology uses contextual understanding and computer vision to address the complex, back-end requirements needed for screen reader and keyboard navigation
adjustments.