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> Thanks. I found what I was looking for on the WebAIM site
> under Designing
> for Screen Reader Compatability. The site provided excellent
> examples of
> things to look out for, such as homographs.
>
>http://www.webaim.org/techniques/screenreader/
>
Yow, the stuff you don't consider unless it slaps you in the face...
I don't have any blind friends - nor any deaf ones, for that matter.
I wonder how bending a page on my site to accommodate a screen reader would affect SEO.
It's not clear what a screen reader reads first, with respect to textual content versus CSS and structural stuff (like menus, ads, etc.)
For example, a site has a two or three-column design, with tired old menu-items-down-the-left column. The owner decides to switch-to (or add) across-the-top main menu with drop-down sub-menus. Did he just screw up the screen reader? Or did he make it easier for the blind person?
The same guy has tier-2 and tier-3 pages and "helpfully" gathers links to related tier-3 pages and presents them in a table on the relevant tier-2 page. One column has the links, and one column has the explanations/expansions to indicate why the visitor would want to browse to each third-tier page. Does this help... or hinder the unsighted visitor who's relying on a screen reader?
Hmm. Where can one borrow a blind person to vet one's page-design decisions?
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