|
ABSTRACT
This paper examines the degree of overlap between good design for physical ease of access on the Web in general, and design for physical ease of use on the mobile Web. There are marked differences in the basic interaction techniques used and usability issues experienced. As a group, people with physical impairments tend to have a broader range of needs. These differences impact Web page design in various ways. Problems can be addressed in a unified way by designing for device independence. At least for physical ease of access, a unified set of mobile/accessibility best practice guidelines would be mutually beneficial. This approach may be helpful in preventing fragmentation of the Web.
REFERENCES
Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.
| |
1
|
Caldwell, B., Chisholm, W., Slatin, J. and Vanderheiden, G. (eds) Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 2.0. W3C Working Draft 23 November 2005.
|
| |
2
|
Chisholm, W., Vanderheiden, G. and Jacobs, I (eds) Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0. W3C Recommendation 5-May-1999.
|
 |
3
|
|
| |
4
|
Disability Rights Commission. The Web: Access and Inclusion for Disabled People. Disability Rights Commission, UK, 2004. ISBN 0 11 703287 5.
|
 |
5
|
|
 |
6
|
|
| |
7
|
Hawking, S. and Alliance for Technology Access. Computer Resources for People With Disabilities: A Guide to Assistive Technologies, Tools, and Resources for People of All Ages. 4th Edition. Hunter House Publishers, CA, 2004.
|
| |
8
|
Jacobs, I., Gunderson, J. and Hansen, E. (eds) User Agent Accessibility Guidelines 1.0 W3C Recommendation 17 December 2002.
|
| |
9
|
Kim, H. and Lee, K. Device-independent Web browsing based on CC/PP and annotation. Interacting with Computers 18 (2006), 283--303
|
| |
10
|
MacKenzie, I. and Soukoreff, R. Text entry for mobile computing: Models and methods, theory and practice. Human-Computer Interaction. Lawrence Erlbaum Associates (2002) 17, 147--198.
|
 |
11
|
|
| |
12
|
Rabin, J. and McCathieNevile, C. (eds) Mobile Web best practices 1.0. W3C Working Draft 13 January 2006.
|
 |
13
|
|
| |
14
|
|
 |
15
|
Aileen Worden , Nef Walker , Krishna Bharat , Scott Hudson, Making computers easier for older adults to use: area cursors and sticky icons, Proceedings of the SIGCHI conference on Human factors in computing systems, p.266-271, March 22-27, 1997, Atlanta, Georgia, United States
[doi> 10.1145/258549.258724]
|
INDEX TERMS
Primary Classification:
H.
Information Systems
H.5
INFORMATION INTERFACES AND PRESENTATION (I.7)
H.5.2
User Interfaces (D.2.2, H.1.2, I.3.6)
Subjects:
Input devices and strategies (e.g., mouse, touchscreen)
Additional Classification:
H.
Information Systems
H.5
INFORMATION INTERFACES AND PRESENTATION (I.7)
H.5.2
User Interfaces (D.2.2, H.1.2, I.3.6)
Subjects:
Interaction styles (e.g., commands, menus, forms, direct manipulation)
General Terms:
Design,
Human Factors
Keywords:
UAAG,
WCAG,
accessibility,
input devices,
mobile web,
navigation,
physical disability,
selection,
text entry,
usability,
web browsing
|