- Day 1: Jackie
- Day 5: Marcus
- Day 7: Identifying your language
- Day 8: Constructing meaningful page titles
- Day 9: Providing additional navigation aids
- Day 10: Presenting your main content first
- Day 11: Skipping over navigation links
- Day 14: Adding titles to links
- Day 15: Defining keyboard shortcuts
- Day 16: Not opening new windows
- Day 18: Giving your calendar a real caption
- Day 19: Using real table headers
- Day 20: Providing a summary for tables
- Day 21: Ignoring spacer images
- Day 22: Using real lists (or faking them properly)
- Day 23: Providing text equivalents for images
- Day 24: Providing text equivalents for image maps
Here the tips are grouped by the disabilities that benefit from them. Note that the second group, the technological disabilities, may not stem from physical disabilities. Michael sometimes uses a text-only browser purely for bandwidth considerations; Lillian is stuck in a corporate environment that has disabled all scripting for security reasons.
Browse tips by physical disability
Blindness
Skip over blindness-related tipsLow vision
Skip over low vision-related tipsColorblindness
Skip over colorblindness-related tipsCognitive disabilities
Skip over cognitive disability-related tips- Day 3: Bill
- Day 9: Providing additional navigation aids
- Day 16: Not opening new windows
- Day 17: Defining acronyms
Browse tips by technological disability
No images
Skip over image-related tips- Day 2: Michael
- Day 5: Marcus
- Day 21: Ignoring spacer images
- Day 22: Using real lists (or faking them properly)
- Day 23: Providing text equivalents for images
- Day 25: Using real horizontal rules (or faking them properly)