These are the Top 10 tips to making your website accessible to the blind or visually impaired using the world’s most popular screen reader.
Is your website optimized for screen readers? Have you tested it lately? Many webmasters don’t take into consideration design methods that allow visitors with disabilities to easily use their website.
By refraining to follow industry guidelines, they’re completely cutting off a significant portion of the population from accessing their online presence. While there are many levels of accessibility webmasters should follow, here are my top ten tips to making your website easier to use to blind and low-vision visitors:
So your website is running a little slow, egh? It can happen, especially when they’re overloaded with Content Management Systems (CMS), forums, blogs, contact scripts, and pages that automatically generate dynamic content. When JavaScript libraries, heavy CSS, and HTML fill up your web page, the efficiency dramatically drops causing a longer load time.
Luckily, there is a way out. Here are a few tips and tricks to make your website perform better and your pages load faster:
We are constantly trying to improve the usefulness of our website. It is our vision to provide tools and resources to all of our visitors, including those who are not our customers.
