- From: Marc David Johnson <mjohnson@marcdavidjohnson.com>
- Date: Tue, 10 Jul 2001 16:43:49 -0400
- To: "Brooke Dine" <dine@ncbi.nlm.nih.gov>, "w3cwai" <w3c-wai-ig@w3.org>
>From: "Brooke Dine" <dine@ncbi.nlm.nih.gov> >I feel that I'm hitting a new level of learning with Section 508. My knowledge seems to be many of the workshops that are offered by the agency where I work. I know how to make a >site accessible on my own. However, now I need to create a requirements document for the programmers who manage our site. Almost like the W3C/508 checklists, indicating exactly >what must be overhauled and where (proper tagging, etc.). >I have never created such a document. Has anyone done this? Are there examples on the web I might download? As always, your suggestions are always appreciated and insightful! ---------------- Okay, I am going to go out on a limb here and hope I am not infringing too badly on any W3C copyrights ... I have gone through the online documentation and created a 20 page Microsoft Word report that is based on the Priorities and Checkpoints for each section with examples and explanations for each. This was done for my office as most of the users were completely overwhelmed with the W3C site and couldn't figure out where they needed to go for the information or got themselves lost in 'link-land'. The conetent is from the W3C, I have just massaged it to make it a little more understandable and organized for people. If anyone from the W3C finds that I shouldn't have this posted for people to use due to copyright infringement, etc., please let me know and I will remove it from my site immediately, but until then, for those interested, feel free to download it and hopefully it will help spread the accessibility movement further and faster ... http://www.marcdavidjohnson.com/accessibility_report.doc Marc David Johnson Web Designer mjohnson@marcdavidjohnson.com http://www.MarcDavidJohnson.com "A little bit of everything ... and a whole lot of nothing."
Received on Tuesday, 10 July 2001 16:40:43 UTC