Needs of the disabled spark inventions – why not in web design?

I just created a presentation for a Tech Talk later on with the topic “Accessibility and You, a non-tech approach to web accessibility” and during the collection of material I realized that a lot of real world inventions were based on the needs of disabled people and are now benefitting everybody.

  • Thomas Edison and Alexander Graham Bell invented the loudspeaker and subsequently the telephone to help Edison overcome his hearing problems, now we all use loudspeakers (sometimes to turn us into someone who is hard-of-hearing)
  • Subtitling and captioning of movies and TV programmes helps deaf users, but also those who are not firm in a foreign language and still want to see the movies as they were intended (I learned a lot by watching Monty Python’s Flying Circus with subtitles)
  • “Talking VCRs and universally accessible doors”:http://www.enquirer.com/editions/2002/07/29/tem_aids_for_disabled.html make it a lot easier for both people with disabilities and those without to use them.
  • The University of Manchester is “working on some software to make mobile web surfing a lot easier”:http://www.manchester.ac.uk/aboutus/news/pressreleases/mobileweb/ by automatically stripping unnecessary content from web sites. The algorithms and logic of the software is based on research with blind users and screen readers.
  • IBM is working on “an alert service for deaf people to get informed when there is a public announcement”:http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/5350030.stm on stations and airports. When there is an announcement their mobile phones get a message or vibrate, which is something that any visitor could profit from (how many times did you have a delayed flight, went for a coffee and had to neck it because you felt uneasy about not seeing the notice board?)
  • The curb cut, those dips in sidewalks created for people using wheelchairs makes it easier for people with prams, cyclists and others, too.
  • OCR scanning “was invented to allow a blind person to hear a text”:http://www.kurzweiltech.com/raybio.html that was previously printed and became a massive success in data entry processes.

These are just some examples, and I’ll be happy to add more (comment please) were a disability became the spark that started a new invention.

However, when you look at any web design list or forum these days, all you hear is “I need to add skip links” or “I need to make this accessible” or “how can I make this work with screen readers?”. Where is the spark there? How come not many people see accessibility as a chance to improve a current product or use it as a test phase to give the product a trial by fire before considering it worthy of publication?

During a summit last month in Germany “Markus Erle”:http://www.wertewerk.de/ talked about accessibility testing as an incubator to make products more stable, mature and ready for the real world and not as a means to create a habitat for handicapped users.

This inclusive approach is not new, in fact Wendy Chisholm’s article “Innovative Design Inspired by Accessibility”:http://www.digital-web.com/articles/innovative_design_accessibility/ on “Digital Web”:http://www.digital-web.com covered it already in 2005, but I don’t see it being followed or getting as much time in the limelight as the old “so what do we have to do to accommodate disabled users”?

Thanks to “Tomas Caspers”:http://tomascaspers.de and “Mike Davies”:http://www.isolani.co.uk

[tags]Accessibility,Usability,Web Design,Design,Access[/tags]

3 Responses to “Needs of the disabled spark inventions – why not in web design?”

  1. Stephane Deschamps Says:

    Two examples come to my mind:

    - The TV remote was invented for motor disabilities, and now every TV has one.

    - In some cities, tramway platforms have been moved up so that they are level with tramway cars, so that wheelchairs could come on board more easily. They found out that prams could get on easier as well, people fell less than when you’ve got two-step stairs, and getting on and off the tram was faster. In the end it benefited security as well as more regular time tables.

  2. lila Says:

    Hi, I was surfing trying to find a website that has different inventions for disabled since I’ve recently developed pps.(post polio syndrome)I am female trying to find things to help save muscle, while working in the yard, digging tools since I am loosing muscle in arms and legs. I want to try to stay in my home that I’d just purchased and was clearing the land when an injury caused the pps. I was hoping to find one website that would show me or list new things that could help me remain independant, since I had to quit my job, 911 operator, and too young for deceased husbands social sec. and too long since he died to my injury (over 7 years)and trying to find things that are within my means. Any suggestions? thanks for any help

  3. Shazia Shamim Says:

    I have my own website design and development company. Did you look at W3C standards? they have defined a standard for each website. Although many websites are not using it but if we use them to design any website it will be really a great help.

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