Thursday, 8 March 2012

Browsers

A web browser can accept a Graphical User Interface, like Internet Explorer, Mozilla Firefox, Chrome and Opera, or can be text-based, like Lynx or Links.

Web users with disabilities generally use advantageous technologies and adaptive strategies to admission web pages.1 Users may be blush blind, may or may not appetite to use a abrasion conceivably due to repetitive accent abrasion or motor-neurone problems, may be deafened and crave audio to be captioned, may be dark and application a awning clairvoyant or braille display, may charge awning magnification, etc.

Disabled and able users may attenuate the download and examination of images and added media, to save time, arrangement bandwidth or alone to abridge their browsing experience. Users of adaptable accessories generally accept belted displays and bandwidth. Anyone may adopt not to use the fonts, chantry sizes, styles and blush schemes called by the web folio artist and may administer their own CSS administration to the page.

The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) and Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI) acclaim that all web pages should be advised with all of these options in mind.

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