Fr. 48.90

Universal Design for Web Applications - Web Applications that Reach Everyone

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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Universal Design for Web Applications teaches you how to build websites that are more accessible to people with disabilities and explains why doing so is good business. It takes more work up front, but the potential payoff is huge -- especially when mobile users need to access your sites.

You'll discover how to use standards-based web technologies -- such as XHTML, CSS, and Ajax, along with video and Flash -- to develop applications for a wide range of users and a variety of devices, including the mobile Web. You'll also learn specifics about this target audience, especially the key over-50 age group, whose use of the Web is rapidly growing.

With this book, you will: Learn the importance of metadata and how it affects images, headings, and other design elements Build forms that accommodate cell phones, screen readers, word prediction, and more Create designs using color and text that are effective in a variety of situations Construct tables that present information without spatial cues Design Ajax-driven social networking applications that people with disabilities can access Provide audio with transcriptions and video that includes captions and audio descriptions Discover assistive technology support for Rich Internet Application technologies such as Flash, Flex, and Silverlight
Universal Design for Web Applications provides you with a roadmap to help you design easy-to-maintain web applications that benefit a larger audience.

List of contents










Dedication;
Preface;
Audience;
How to Read This Book;
A Chapter Breakdown;
Conventions Used in This Book;
Using Code Examples;
Safari® Books Online;
How to Contact Us;
Acknowledgments;
Chapter 1: Introducing Universal Design;
1.1 Accessible Design: A Story;
1.2 Putting Universal Design to Work;
Chapter 2: Selling It;
2.1 There Is No "Them";
2.2 Audience Characteristics;
2.3 Growth Opportunity;
2.4 Legal Liability;
2.5 The Standards;
2.6 Professionalism;
2.7 Early and Often;
2.8 Summary;
Chapter 3: Metadata;
3.1 What Is Metadata?;
3.2 Images;
3.3 Keys to Writing Good Text Alternatives;
3.4 Summary;
Chapter 4: Structure and Design;
4.1 First Principles;
4.2 Headings;
4.3 Links;
4.4 Tables;
4.5 Lists;
4.6 Color;
4.7 CSS Highlights;
4.8 Flicker and Patterns;
4.9 Designing for Email;
4.10 Summary;
Chapter 5: Forms;
5.1 Labels;
5.2 fieldset and legend;
5.3 The accesskey Attribute;
5.4 Tab Order;
5.5 Error Handling;
5.6 CAPTCHA;
5.7 Summary;
Chapter 6: Tabular Data;
6.1 Data Table Basics;
6.2 Headings and Data;
6.3 Complex Data Tables;
6.4 Readability, Layout, and Design;
6.5 Summary;
Chapter 7: Video and Audio;
7.1 Web Video: The Early Years;
7.2 Accessibility in Video;
7.3 Transcripts and Text Alternatives;
7.4 Summary;
Chapter 8: Scripting;
8.1 Building on a Solid Foundation;
8.2 Summary;
Chapter 9: Ajax and WAI-ARIA;
9.1 Taking Stock of Existing Code;
9.2 Summary;
Chapter 10: Rich Internet Applications;
10.1 Features of RIAs;
10.2 User-Generated Content;
10.3 Testing Your Code;
10.4 Summary;
Chapter 11: The Process;
11.1 Universal by Design;
Cross-Reference for Universal Design for Web Applications;
Colophon;

About the author










Wendy Chisholm is a consultant, developer, author, and speaker on the topic of universal design. As co-editor of the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0 (WCAG 1.0) and then staff at the World Wide Web Consortium, she has worked with people around the globe to make the web accessible. Currently residing in Seattle, WA, Wendy consults with market leaders such as Microsoft, Adobe and Google, integrating universal design concepts into their tools and technologies. She continues to further the research and development of universal design as a part-time staff at the University of Washington.
Matt May is a developer, technologist, and accessibility advocate who is responsible for working internally and externally with Adobe product teams and customers to address accessibility in Adobe products, ensure interoperability with assistive technologies, and make customers aware of the many accessibility features that already exist in Adobe products.Prior to joining Adobe, Matt worked for W3C/WAI on many of the core standards in web accessibility, led the Web Standards Project's Accessibility Task Force, helped to architect one of the first online grocery sites, http://HomeGrocer.com, and co-founded Blue Flavor, a respected web and mobile design consultancy.


Summary

Demonstrates how to build a website to accommodate people with physical and learning disabilities makes marketing sense. This book shows how to use standards - based web technologies such as XHTML, CSS, and Ajax, along with fresh uses for video, Flash, and PDF to develop applications for a wide range of users.

Product details

Authors Wend Chisholm, Wendy Chisholm, Chisholm Wendy, Matt May, Matthew May
Publisher O'Reilly Media
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 29.12.2008
 
EAN 9780596518738
ISBN 978-0-596-51873-8
No. of pages 198
Weight 282 g
Illustrations w. figs.
Series O'Reilly Ser.
Subjects Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > IT, data processing > Programming languages

Web-Grafik und -Design, standards, video, cellular, 508, DOM

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