Transcript of Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 Washington DC (703) 637-8955 SSB BART Group Accessibility Concepts.
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 SSB BART Group Accessibility Concepts
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Training Overview
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Training Overview Objective - This training
provides an overview of accessibility relevant to Electronic and
Information Technology (EIT) Goals - Provide a general overview of
users with disabilities - Define assistive technology - List
several user requirements for individuals with disabilities -
Provide an overview of applicable laws - Define accessibility -
Describe assistive technologies used by people who are blind or
visually impaired -
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Training Outline Disability Types Laws and
Regulations Assistive Technologies Screen Readers Screen Magnifiers
AMP
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Disability Types
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Disability Types Section Objectives Understand
the various different types of disabilities Knowledge Requirements
General understanding of disability types Understanding of
challenges different disability types face with EIT systems Section
Objectives | Knowledge Requirements
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Disability Types Overview Accessibility applies
to access of information by people with many different types of
disabilities Common disability types include - Visual Blindness Low
Vision - Auditory/Hearing - Mobility - Speech - Cognitive
Overview
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Blindness Definition - Individuals that are blind
lack the ability to see Example Challenges - Telecommunication
Accessibility Images, lights and text on the phone displays cannot
be read Solution Provide text to speech alternative to access this
information - Web Accessibility - Images on web pages must be
described Solution - Provide alternative text for images Assistive
Technologies - Screen readers JAWS Windows Eyes - Refreshable
Braille Displays - Binaural headsets
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Low Vision Definition - Some degree of visual
perception with visual acuity less than 20/200 Example Challenges -
Hardware Accessibility - Device display text may be to small to
read Solution Provide the ability to use a computer screen to
display phone information - Software Accessibility - Foreground and
background colors may not provide sufficient contrast Solution
Provide foreground and background color that provide good contrast
Solution Provide users the ability to control screen contrast
Assistive Technologies - Screen magnifiers ZoomText Magic
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Mobility Definition - Individuals that have some
limitation of movement Example Challenges - Web Accessibility -
Closely spaced controls may be difficult to activate Solution
Provide layouts with sufficient spacing between controls - Software
Accessibility - Requirements to press multiple keys simultaneously
Solution Ensure software does not require multiple controls to be
pressed at the same time Assistive Technologies - Head Pointers
Allow individuals without fine motor control to control a pointer
on the screen - Voice Recognition Software Allows individuals
without fine motor control to control a computer and dictate using
the voice - Onscreen keyboards Allow for alternate methods of
entering keystrokes
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Speech Definition - Individuals with speech
disabilities may lack the ability or have a difficultly producing
speech Example Challenges - Telecommunication Accessibility - Voice
enabled IVR systems will not be accessible - Solution Provide
alternative navigation methods for IVR trees Assistive Technologies
- Speech Completion Devices - Voice communications may be
facilitated through a TTY device
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Auditory Definition - Individuals with hearing
disabilities may lack the ability or have a difficultly hearing
Example Challenges - Telecommunication Accessibility Phone systems
with prompts will not be accessible Solution Provide alternative
navigation methods for prompt trees to work with TTY/TDD devices
Assistive Technologies - Show sounds tools - Voice communications
may be facilitated through a TTY device
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Cognitive Definition - Individuals with cognitive
disabilities have some form of impairment of the cognitive process
- Cognitive disabilities span a wide variety of disability types
including Developmental Disabilities Dyslexia Example Challenges -
Web Accessibility - Foreground and background color combinations
can make reading controls, displays and printed instructions
difficult Solution Provide users with a variety of contrast
settings - Software Accessibility - Animation can distract users
and hinder reading Solution Avoid the use of animation within
applications - Documentation Accessibility - Prompts and
instructions written with complex or unclear language can be
difficult to understand Solution Utilize the simplest language
possible to describe a given issue Assistive Technologies - Reading
Systems Combination of text to speech and visual page tracking Used
by individuals with dyslexia to ease process of reading
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Age Related Disabilities The incidence rates for
disabilities increase as people grow older At least 52% of people
65 and older have one disability Web use and computer penetration
in the 65 and older population is growing The aging baby boomer
population makes heavy use of EIT including the Web
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Disability Population Statistics US Disability
Facts About 49.7 million Americans have disabilities Roughly one in
six people in the US population Mobility and Sensory Disabilities
21.2 million have a mobility disability 9.3 million have a sensory
disability involving sight or hearing Blindness 3.3 million
Americans are blind By 2020 5.5 million Americans will be blind
European Disability Facts 50M Europeans have disabilities Similar
incidence rates and as within the US population International
Disability Facts Global disabled population is estimated at 600M
Large proportion of this is in emerging markets that may not yet
have well developed disability laws
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Laws and Regulations
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Laws and Regulations Section Objectives
Understand the various different regulations relating to
accessibility Knowledge Requirements Be familiar with the legal
accessibility requirements Understand requirements of ADA and
Section 508 in the US Section Objectives | Knowledge
Requirements
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Laws and Regulations Various different laws
govern accessibility Laws cover International Requirements E.U.
Requirements Domestic Requirements - U.S. - U.K. - Japan
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Regulatory Standards Various different countries
have EIT accessibility legislation International Requirements A
variety of international standards bodies have work relating to
accessibility These standards have no direct legal authority but
are generally related to domestic standards European Union
Requirements The eAccessibility working group defines general EU
accessibility policies Member states may have additional domestic
requirements, most notably the United Kingdoms Disability
Discrimination Act United States Requirements Section 508 of the
Rehabilitation Act Section 255 of the Telecommunication Act The
Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) Japan Requirements Japan has
specific requirements under the Japanese Industrial Standard
(JIS)
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 International Standards A variety of different
international standards making bodies have active EIT related
accessibility work These standards are utilized as the basis for
most domestic standards Relevant Organizations Include World Wide
Web Consortium (W3C) International Standards Organization (ISO)
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) Internet
Engineering Task Force (IETF) International Telecommunications
Union (ITU) Human Factors and Ergonomics Society (HFES)
International Committee for Information Technology Standards
(INCITS)
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 International Standards The World Wide Web
Consortium (W3C) developed the Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI)
in an effort to pursue global Web accessibility. The WAI ensures
that Web technologies provide support for accessibility by
including guidelines for accessibility and evaluating the
accessibility of Web sites The WAI produces the Web Content
Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) a broad set of best practices for
producing web content The WCAG form the basis of most Web
Accessibility standards including Section 508 and EU standards WAI
Web Accessibility Initiative
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 EU Requirements The European Union (EU) Council
issued the Resolution on eInclusion and eAccessibility, which built
on several previous resolutions regarding accessibility i2010
targets the year 2010 as the date for the EU member states to
require accessibility as part of all public sector and certain
private sector EIT procurements EU accessibility regulations are
likely to require a higher degree of accessibility than US
regulations EU eAccessibility Guidance
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 U.S. Requirements Hearing Aid Compatibility Act
of 1988 Requires the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to
ensure that all telephones manufactured or imported for use in the
United States after August 1989 are hearing aid compatible
Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 Permits people with
disabilities to file civil lawsuits in order to obtain reasonable
accommodation Use of accessible telecommunications in the workplace
allows conformance with ADA standards Section
255,Telecommunications Act of 1996 Empowers the Federal
Communications Commission to require disability access provisions
in telecom equipment and services Section 508, Rehabilitation Act
of 1973 (As amended in 1998) Adds specific accessibility
requirements to Federal procurement regulations
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Section 508 Section 508 is a US Federal law
requiring Electronic and Information Technology developed,
purchased, used, and maintained by the Federal government to be
accessible to people with disabilities Required for all US Federal
government purchases of EIT While directly applicable only to US
Federal government Section 508 has been adopted as a best practice
for procurement by most US public sector organizations Section 508
of the Rehabilitation Act of 1998
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Section 508 Technical Systems Software
applications and operating systems Web-based information or
applications Telecommunications products Video or multi-media
products Self contained, closed products such as office equipment
and kiosks Desktop and notebook computers Services Documentation
Support Training Covered Procurement Types
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Section 508 National Security and Intelligence -
1194.3 (a) Cryptologic devices Command and control devices Weapons
systems Incidental Use - 1194.3 (b) Tools procured by a contractor
incidental to delivery of a contract For example, a contractor may
procure a non-compliant HTML editor to help deliver a Section 508
compliant web site to the agency Assistive Technology Availability
- 1194.3 (c) Agency does not have to install assistive technology
on all workstations; only those used by individuals with
disabilities Location Specific - 1194.3 (d) Information or service
is not required at an alternate location For example, if claims
benefits require a claimant to be present at a particular location
to file a claim, this requirement is acceptable under Section 508
Micro Purchases Purchases on government purchase cards prior to
October 1, 2004 are exempt General Exceptions
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Section 508 Equivalent Facilitation EIT may
provide equivalent facilitation for any Section 508 requirement If
a design or technology supplies equivalent or greater access in a
manner different than what is defined in Section 508, it can be
used Allows for technology and design solutions not currently
considered in Subpart B Technical Standards Equivalent facilitation
compared to usability standards in Subpart C Examples A self
voicing application that does not work with a screen reader An
auxiliary input device customized for a person with a mobility
impairment Specific Exceptions
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Section 508 Undue Burden If achieving compliance
represents a significant hardship or expense, an agency can claim
undue burden Undue burden is only considered significant if it
affects the entire agencys resources External v. Internal Undue
Burden - An internal undue burden may exist for legacy applications
that will not be brought into compliance Undue burdens must be
documented including: - Nature of the burden - Portions of Section
508 requirements posing the burden If an undue burden occurs, an
alternative means of providing information or data must be provided
Commercial Non-Availability Commercial non-availability means that
a compliant product is not available on the market Requires that
all available products are non-compliant Agency cannot claim
non-availability if products fail to fully meet requirements -
Agency must acquire most compliant product If agency claims
non-availability, non-compliant portions should be documented
similar to undue burden Examples A partially compliant software
system is the only system available that meets the functional
requirements Specific Exceptions
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Section 508 Specific Exceptions Fundamental
Alteration Products or features that would require a fundamental
alteration to become compliant are exempt Fundamental alteration is
defined as an alteration that would affect basic function of the
product Examples PDAs requiring text to speech readers Pagers
requiring Braille displays Claims primarily relate to hardware
Specific Exceptions
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Section 508 EIT is considered to be back office
if it is Located in a limited access or secure area frequented
solely by service personnel Used by service personnel for repair,
maintenance, or occasional monitoring EIT products fall under this
exception only if they are physically accessed from a back office
location cannot be accessed remotely For example, if they are
usable only in the limited access or secure area Examples A
telecommunications switch located in a network closet A
non-configurable network switch Note - EIT web based and desktop
administration tools are not generally considered exempt under the
back office exemption These interfaces do need to be made compliant
Back Office Exceptions
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 U.S. Requirements The ADA prevents employers with
more than 15 employees from basing employment decisions on the
basis of disability. The ADA applies to employment, state and local
government, public accommodations, commercial facilities,
transportation, telecommunications, and the U.S. Congress
Application of the ADA to the Internet is still unclear - High
profile sites have been sued for non- compliance with the ADA -
District court location regulates whether ADA to the Internet -
Prudent estimates assume the ADA applies Americans with
Disabilities Act
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 U.K. Requirements In 1995, the United Kingdom
passed the Disability Discrimination Act (DDA), making it unlawful
to provide lower-quality service to people with disabilities In
1999 the DDA required companies to make "reasonable adjustments" to
services in order to provide accessibility Among other requirements
this necessitates that user EIT systems and work environment be
accessible Disability Discrimination Act (DDA) United Kingdom
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Japan Requirements Japan does not have any
regulations similar to the ADA or DDA, so there is no basis for
legal control or enforcement of accessibility. However, design
guidelines that focus on providing accessibility to people with
disabilities in IT systems have been developed in Japan.
Specifically, standards for EIT were released in 2004 as part of
the Japanese Industrial Standard (JIS X 2004:8341). The Japanese
government has encouraged organizations with a presence in Japan to
adopt these standards. JIS X 2004:8341 Japan
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Assistive Technologies
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Assistive Technologies Definition Assistive
technologies are devices, software or techniques used to assist a
individuals with disabilities in the use (or access) of something
Examples: Screen readers & magnifiers Onscreen or other special
keyboards Wheelchairs TTY devices Canes Refreshable Braille
displays
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Accessibility Definition - The degree to which
EIT can be accessed by people with disabilities EIT can meet legal
standard such as Section 508 compliance but may still not be
accessible to people who are disabled.
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Screen Readers and Magnifiers
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Screen Readers and Magnifiers Section Objectives
Understand commonly used screen readers and magnifiers Understand
responsibility of organizations with respect to screen readers and
magnifiers Knowledge Requirements Understand how screen readers and
magnifiers work Understand the impact of screen readers and
magnifiers on EIT systems Section Objectives | Knowledge
Requirements
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Screen Readers and Magnifiers Screen readers and
screen magnifiers are the most common types of assistive technology
used by visually impaired users Screen readers function by reading
the contents of a computer screen Screen magnifiers function by
magnifying portions of the screen Overview
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Screen Readers Definition - Computer programs
that use Text To Speech (TTS) technology to read the contents of
the computer screen aloud to a blind or visually impaired user
Screen readers may also be referred to as TTS systems or by brand
names Screen readers provide functionality for reading screen
contents and keyboard based input commands to replace visually
dependant input devices such as the mouse Examples - JAWS for
Windows by Freedom Scientific - Window-Eyes by GW-Micro - Microsoft
Narrator (built in to Windows 2000 and later)
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 JAWS for Windows JAWS for Windows, commonly
referred to simply as JAWS, is the most popular screen reader on
the market JAWS has over 85% market share by most estimates JAWS
provides TTS output using a computers sound card or an external
dedicated speech synthesizer JAWS supports refreshable Braille
displays JAWS provides a scripting language for assisting in making
inaccessible applications accessible - Add prompts - Change the tab
order - Provide hotkeys to access critical elements - Provide
context sensitive help
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Window-Eyes Window-Eyes is the second most
popular screen reader on the market Window-Eyes provides speech
output through computers sound card or optional speech synthesizer
Supports refreshable Braille displays Supports customization
through the use of SET files
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Screen Magnifiers Screen Magnifiers enlarge the
contents of the screen allowing users with low vision to read
printed information and see images and other information clearly.
Magnification levels from 1.2x to 16x typically supported May also
include limited screen reader functionality to supplement
magnification Image & color manipulation functions provided to
render images easier to see Overview
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 ZoomText and Magic ZoomText Most popular screen
magnifier Provides large range of magnification levels Offers color
replacement, removal and manipulation to enhance image contrast
Offers optional screen reader component to supplement magnification
Magic Second most popular screen magnifier Tight integration with
JAWS Provides similar magnification and image manipulation
functionality to ZoomText Provides very basic screen reader
functionality - Users encouraged to use JAWS
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Special Considerations Screen Reader and
Magnifier Special Considerations Screen Readers and Magnifiers will
utilize a Display Chain Manager (DCM) to install a special video
driver to intercept screen contents Any software that changes or
manipulates the display driver may cause problems GDI+ and DirectX
applications are not supported by Screen Readers/Magnifiers and may
cause a system crash if used while they are active Self-Voicing
programs that use the SAPI interface may interfere with the speech
functions of a screen reader or may fail to operate when a screen
reader is active
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Accessibility Management Platform (AMP)
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 What does AMP do? Accessibility Management
Platform Audits - The primary set of functionality within AMP is
designed to manage all accessibility testing and reporting work in
one location: AMP itself. Auditing staff can manage the systems
they're testing in AMP, create their reports for those systems (a
group of reports) within AMP, perform automatic, manual, and use
case tests within AMP, and generate their reports using AMP.
Stakeholders, developers, and system owners can all access and
review the results directly within AMP as well. Standards
Management - AMP manages compliance with accessibility standards
through what are known as "Best Practices". The cornerstone of the
AMP system is the use of a best-practice- based approach to
compliance which reduces the industry standards into a series of
conformance criteria we call Best Practices adherence to these best
practices leads to conformance with the standards. We'll see a
description of that later Training - Every user of AMP is also
given access to a series of online training courses available from
within AMP itself which cover a variety of topics ranging from
"Accessibility Overview" to Accessibility training on advanced
Flash and Flex topics.
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 AMP Best Practices What is a Best Practice? For
each industry SSB's consulting staff have dissected the individual
provisions of relevant accessibility standards into conformance
criteria we call Best Practices. Using Section 508 as an example,
we've determined for each individual provision within Section 508
what it truly means to conform to that standard. Following the best
practices lead to conformance. Every licensed user of AMP has
access to all of the best practices that map to a wide variety of
accessibility standards and technology platforms
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 AMP Best Practices Best Practice Organization
Best practices are organized based on the technology platform that
they correspond to. This organization makes it easy to quickly find
the appropriate best practice based on the technology platform that
the user is currently working with. The following is a list of the
available technology platforms: - Web - Adobe Flash/Flex - Adobe
Acrobat PDF - Adobe LiveCycle - Java Software - Multimedia -
Windows Native Software - Macintosh Software - Hardware - Telecom -
Support
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 InFocus InFocus Overview InFocus is a tool which
uses a series of checkers to perform automated diagnostics that
determine accessibility and compliance based on a variety of
accessibility standards. InFocus makes it easy to follow the
violations found on your site or files by highlighting the line(s)
of HTML code corresponding to each violation. InFocus also allows
for easy use, understanding, and correction of violations to your
web site, Intranet, local web development directory or file.
InFocus is a desktop application designed in a manner consistent
with Windows- compatible programs, and should be easy to use by
people familiar with PCs and typical graphical user interfaces.
InFocus can be launch from the browser and does not require a
lengthy installation.
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 InFocus Toolbar The InFocus Toolbar Features
Assists in capturing modules (web pages or parts of pages) for
testing - Users can record a session for capturing test content
(automatically captures each page you navigate to) - Users can use
their mouse for selecting portions of pages for capture Tools -
Contrast Analyzer for inspecting color contrast found on pages
Provides accessibility testing preview modes - Disable Style sheets
- Grayscale - Heading Structure - Show as Text - Page Information
Easy access to Internet Explorer Accessibility Settings - Allows
the user to quickly adjust their Internet Explorer accessibility
settings Available to all users who have a license to AMP -
Compatible with Internet Explorer 6, 7 and 8
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Reference and Credits
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- Silicon Valley (415) 975-8000 www.ssbbartgroup.com Washington
DC (703) 637-8955 Image Attributions SSB BART Group uses Flickr
Creative Commons Images Slide 3 - On Goree Island - angela7dreams
Slide 4 - Venezia - iessi Slide 6 Mosaic Tiles - a2gemma Slide 7
untitled - felix388 Slide 8 GVB 533 - gen gibson Slide 9 Tulip Time
- Charlie Dave Slide 10 Remnants of Errwood Hall - Smabs Sputzer
Slide 11 Blue Sea Holly - audrey jm529 Slide 12 Barn swallow
(Hirundo rustica) - Minette Layne Slide 14 tempo della concordia-
dottorpeni Slide 17 Heidelberg-01-0020 - Andrei Dimofte Slide 18
larrrrnden. Parliament building- Bert2332 Slide 19 Wrigley Building
- David Paul Ohmer Slide 20 Barcelona Eres Fantastica - gabo2 Slide
21 W3C WAI Project Slide 22 EU eInclusion Project Slide 24 Picture
549 - rogerbarker2 Slide 25 Teatro Marcello - luigig Slide 27
Hasbro Slide 29 Colorful Ropes Tanakawaho Slide 31 Fantastic
Feathery Fern skedonk Slide 32 11 Manchester Town Hall Jorge Slide
33 off Toushougu 44 teien Slide 35 untitled Misstumer Slide 38 Wild
Purple VI: Soft Water J.Rosario Slide 39 The Door - MHeinzel