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13 lines
1.3 KiB
Markdown
13 lines
1.3 KiB
Markdown
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title: "Re: blindness awareness month AMA"
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date: 2022-10-07T11:35:57-07:00
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replyURI: "https://mspsocial.net/@bright_helpings/109104639750302917"
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replyTitle: "October is Blindness Awareness Month, AMA"
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replyType: "SocialMediaPosting"
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replyAuthor: "Erik"
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replyAuthorURI: "https://cosmolinguist.dreamwidth.org"
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---
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The most common and major accessibility (<abbr title="accessibility">a11y</abbr>) issues tend to be documented and well-known among <abbr>a11y</abbr> practitioners; however, "smaller" or "niche" issues (for lack of a better term) tend to go unnoticed. For instance, I recently learned that over-use of soft-hyphens can trip up the speech synthesis of the NVDA screen reader, and styling superscripts/subscripts a certain way can stop screen readers from announcing them. I also learned about how performance issues can cause delays in screen readers, making content exposed to screen readers fall out-of-sync with the actual page. We won't learn about this in accessibility tutorials or W3C documentation! The only way to discover these issues is to use many screen readers for a long time.
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What are some accessibility hazards---or even mild annoyances---you experience, that you _don't_ think most <abbr>a11y</abbr> practitioners learn about? Is there a common annoyance you wouldn't normally bring up because it seems "too minor"?
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