Kirk, Sorry to butt in, but ... I would disagree with your assertion that most websites want the widest audience possible. I would suggest that most organisations want the most targeted audience for their websites to meet their agendas. Eg If I am selling gourmet food, I want to reach connoisseurs. I don't care who else looks at my site other than the foodies (blind, deaf or otherwise). However if I am a statutory monopoly like the AuDA, I would want my message to be targeted to Australians (eg a demographic that generally speaks english and is comfortable with terms like "arvo" and may or not may be deaf or blind.) Regards Brendan Lewis -----Original Message----- From: Kirk Fletcher [mailto:kirk§enetica.com.au] Sent: Saturday, 11 November 2006 10:12 AM To: .au DNS Discussion List Subject: Re: [DNS] Let's Talk Net David, > So Edwin, are you telling me that it's OK, if they choose, for a web > designer to not consider the needs of people with disabilities when > designing a website? Are you suggesting it's not? Most websites - commercial or otherwise - will want the widest audience possible. It's therefore in their interests to ensure accessibility if they want to increase their reach, *provided* that the benefit of that reach is not outweighed by the cost of implementation. I think Ian summed up this issue nicely. Regards, Kirk Fletcher --------------------------------------------------------------------------- List policy, unsubscribing and archives => http://dotau.org/Received on Sun Nov 12 2006 - 02:12:21 UTC
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