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Access by design - A guide to Universal Usability for Web Designers

Posted by Johan on December 20th, 2006.


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The role of the webdesigner is partially situated around user-centred design. As a designer we need to provide functionality that makes a good user experience.

Sarah Horton, author of the book Access By Design - A guide to Universal Usability for Web Designers (2005) perhaps deliberately mixes up accessibility and usability here.

access by designbookcover

Book Info

  • access by design: a guide to universal usability for web designers

  • Written by Sarah Horton, published by New Riders (Voices That Matter)
    ISBN-10: 0-321-31140-X; ISBN-13: 978-0-321-31140-5. 288 pages
  • Order? From Amazon UK | Amazon US

  • Official book site: universalusability.com

Summary

This book is a primer - a simple and concise introduction to the fundamentals and basic principles about designing accessible and usable websites. S. Horton says:

Do not take control of aspects of the user interface […] that belong in the domain of the user.

The fundamentals are design simple, design for keyboard access and design for transformation. The book is written from a practical point of view full of website screenshots to illustrate best practices and guidelines. In each chapter (document structure, text, images, forms, tables, lists, color, data tables,…) you get a philosophical and meaningful explanation on how to design with usability and accessibility in mind. The last chapters deal with audio and video, page lay-out, interactivity and editorial style. The key message: the Web is a universal medium where appropriate design decisions benefit both visual and non-visual users.

  • Improving readability
  • using structural markup
  • providing alternate textual content (eg for video, audio) or text-to-speech alternate content
  • coding accessible websites that can be read by screen reader software
  • design fluid lay-out to cater for small and wide screens
  • Orientation cues for easy to find your way in a website

In a recent interview in Digital Magazine (Sept. ‘05), the author says:

I think of “access by design” as sort of a philosophical approach to Web design, so it’s just deciding that the primary goal for your design decision-making is going to be to provide access. And the universal usability part is a kind of practical application of that methodology and philosophy that the decisions you make are always going to be the ones that most favor universal usability of your Web sites.

These are all perfect examples of forward and simple design principles in favour of the end-user.

Criticism

What you wont find in the book are technical in-depth solutions. There are some redundant chapters on putting efforts on making table-based websites or frame-based websites more accessible or usable for that matter. For the entire book, the emphasis is on using structural markup and CSS anyway. Added the lack of coding examples makes it hard to put the ideas presented in practise.

What I do like about the book: the many real-world examples that illustrate good design and concise and forward explanations on how to design usable and accessible websites. The book is aimed to get you warmed up, and get you thinking. But nothing more than that. Like the illustration of the front cover, it opens the door but leaves a lot of questions to be answered.

The entire book is online in a HTML format. As Sarah Horton says:

The answer is simple: I write books so people will read them, and having the book online means more people can access the content.

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Yep, access and usability is a big issue, and will become even more important. Computers allow disabled persons to gain a limited indepence, especially it they are paralysed. Audiobooks and reading helps make a lot of information available to them, and having websites that are properly desinged for easy navigation is of prime importance!

Rolf - Audio Books Fan
February 14th, 2007
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