Exploring making site navigation more accessible, with "well‑known destinations"

WAI-Adapt Task Force

★ W3C Breakouts Day 2024, 12 March ★

Welcome

This is a presentation on the latest work of the WAI-Adapt Task Force.

Facilitator: Lionel Wolberger (UserWay AC rep)

Task Force home: https://www.w3.org/WAI/APA/task-forces/adapt/

This talk: https://raw.githack.com/w3c/adapt/main/presentations/breakouts-day-2024/

Presenters:

What is this all about?

The need for WAI‑Adapt

User needs differ

Textual 'save' button
Save button that is a floppy disk icon
Save button that is a floppy disk icon with the text 'save' beneath
Save button that is a picture of a hand holding a USB flash drive

Content Usable

The Cognitive and Learning Disabilities Accessibility Task Force's document on making content usable

The WAI-Adapt ethos

The Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) and Making Content Usable for People with Cognitive and Learning Disabilities can help us make content accessible, but an adaptable approach needs semantics.

We're aiming for the sweet spot, where a small addition of machine-readable semantics supports a wide range of helpful adaptations.

One area we're exploring is…

Site navigation barriers

User goal

Get to a specific part of a site, quickly and easily.

Website common destinations

What support could look like

Example browser extension UI, showing a menu containing 6 well-known destinations supported by a demo site

WAI-Adapt's proposed approach

Build on existing infrastructure

Explainer and draft specification

We are intending to propose some extensions:

Next steps

Next steps

Discussion

Thank you for listening—over to you for questions and discussion!

This talk was created by members of the WAI-Adapt task force

Task Force home: https://www.w3.org/WAI/APA/task-forces/adapt/

This talk: https://raw.githack.com/w3c/adapt/main/presentations/breakouts-day-2024/