
I think web publishers should seriously consider enforcing the developers and designers of the pages of their internet sites to maximize accessibility among other aspects of their internet sites. This is because the rapid growth of the internet viewing population is creating so much competition in the internet site business. Well, since more and more people now have access capabilities to the internet sites on cyberspace, most corporations and businesses make it a point to actually have and maintain an internet site of their own. I think the boom was caused mainly by
fast internet connections, but I do think the affordability of these internet access services also played a key role in the internet viewing population boom.
Plus, assistive technology is making it big nowadays. So, we have internet viewers with disabilities who back then did not have access capabilities to the information on cyberspace. This is why I urge you to create
accessible pages, thus accessible internet sites. There's a lot of internet viewers who have certain disabilities, and providing them with enough functional access capabilities to the information on the pages of your internet site would generally include them to your internet site's viewer population. A big addition to your greedy needs for profits now, don't you think?
Well, one thing is to minimize, if not fully eradicate, the use of colors so as to communicate basic navigation functions and necessary information on the pages of your internet site to your viewers. An alternative to this is grouping similar elements under a single section with enough textual information included on top of either the table or the frame section. Bunching up these elements (such as text links and graphical links) under a certain section while including textual information would provide disabled internet viewers functional access capabilities to the navigation functions and the information on your site.