Archive forAccessibility

Diffiulty reading … then read less!!!

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Accessibility format = Speed Reading format

Shows Banner Reader in action

We regularly measure reading speed under different circumstances. In relation to formatting we’ve found that similar requirements are very beneficial to both the visually impaired and those simply wishing to read faster … a lot faster.

Those with normal sight gain little additional benefit when the text is presented above font size 24 (decent screen). Obviously, the visually impaired can continue to get great benefit with further increased font size. However, the interesting thing is that most people can only take in a few words at a time. And if only a few words are to be displayed then the font size can be enormous with no loss to the normal sighted and benefit to the impaired.

The ReadPal way of sequentially displaying words from your emails, webpages and documents allows you to keep focusing on the one spot and brings the words to your eyes. NOT as usual where your eyes have to find the next word and then re-focus. This clearly saves time and there is less work for tired eyes. However, because the visually impaired have difficulty even finding the words to focus on we’d expect the benefits to be disproportionately large.

Happy reading and visit our site for faster, easier reading for us all.

It is free for individuals and charities so download now!
Visit site here

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Favourite Musician With A Disability- Curtis Mayfield (quadriplegia)…

I see Accessible.com.au have an interesting survey on your
Favourite Musician With A Disability

Curtis Mayfield (quad)
John Mellencamp (spina bifida)
Neil Young (polio)
Freddy Mercury (AIDS)
Rick Aller - Def Leppard (amputee)
Ian Dury (polio)
Stevie Wonder (blind)
Ray Charles (blind)
Peter Tchaikovsky (epilepsy)

(To vote visit their site here - it is also a good resource for those Down Under).

ReadPal helps us all read faster and easier. It is free for individuals and charities so download now!
Visit site here

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Making Gutenberg books readable.

The Project Gutenberg library of ebooks is truly a gift to humanity. In case you don’t know it is a repository of 20,000 books that are out of copy-right. (Most books published pre 1930). Only problem is they are in text format - not nice to read for a page or two - impossible to get through a whole book.

With ReadPal this treasure trove is accessible to all. Reading the books becomes a pleasure once more. My friends are always surprised when I tell them that I read in bed - with my laptop! I use the full-screen mode, massive font size, auto-scrolling and the laptop at my feet. (Secured in case I fall asleep).

We’ve bundled a dozen free ebooks with ReadPal so you can start your Library off. They are selected from the Gutenberg Top 100 hit-list.

For general reviews and views on reading on-screen TeleRead is a good place to start.

It is free for individuals and charities so download now!
Visit site here

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Accessibility Toolbar - but not just for webpages

clear glare-free reading with ReadPalThere are some nice accessibility toolbars that help many to navigate the web. One I like is from Vision Australia . They are a non-profit organisation that assists those with reduced vision. Their toolbar is particularly good if the website the user is looking at has been designed using Cascading Style Sheets, (CSS). This is a way of presenting web pages that allow the viewer to automatically modify the formatting.

If you find this type of solution good for reading websites you should download ReadPal for all your other computer reading. It uses the same principles of presenting any text that you might want to read in the format, font and style that you prefer. So you always read the way you like, (Emails, Explorer, Word and Text files).
Even on webpages it allows you to use the ‘Black-out’ Mode that minimises glare, eliminates flashing web-ads and presents the text as large as you like.

It is free for individuals and charities so download now!
Visit site here

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Accessible pages -34% faster for the rest of us to navigate

My thanks to Smiley Cat for digging up this one. The Disability Rights Commission did a survey of 1,000 sites and found those that were Accessible could be navigated much quicker by the able-bodied too.

As previously mentioned, we’ve found something similar too for reading. If you optimise the reading experience for those with some visual impairment the rest of us can read the text much faster too. Up to twice as fast , depending on the circumstances. This makes perfect sense. If it is easier for the eyes to focus on something they can do the job quicker. ReadPal simply automates this for the user so they don’t have to rely on web-designers with a different agenda. They can always read in their preferred fonts, size and colors.
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Visit site here

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Accessibility / usability - the universities can do better!

Often the universities set trends and standards. However, recently they have come in for a lot of flack because their websites often fall short on usability / accessibility standards. The devolved structure and multiple people posting on their sites probably mean that high standards are difficult to maintain.

By contrast most companies would have a web-master who vets changes to their web presence. This single gatekeeper system allows for easy imposition of minimal usability standards. The unwieldy nature of universities and arguments over academic freedom mean that the oversight of web material is unlikely to improve much.

So what can they do?

As much of their material is viewed from within universities themselves there is an obvious answer. They can facilitate their students and workers by loading decent screen-readers onto every campus computer. Jaws works well for those with no or little sight, ReadPal for the rest of us. Then, at least, if the univeristy sites have dreadful usability they can still be accessed.

As trend setters they could perhaps influence wider society to take greater care of us all.
Visit site here

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Screen reading? A great alternative to Jaws - for us all

Jaws is great and has made computers accessible to many. However, often users don’t actually need the content to be read aloud to them. They only need it properly formatted to suit their eyes. The benefits of better, personalised formatting are for all not just the visually impaired.

ReadPal does all this and is completely free for personal use … so download it, enjoy it and tell all your friends. :-)

Screen reading - a better way

Visit site here

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Accessibility or is it usability? -an issue for us all

“Accessibility is not for me - I can see OK”. This is the general attitude of the population, including web designers and writers.

Good web design is not an ‘us or them’ scenario. Making your website more user-friendly, especially for the visually impaired, usually ensures a much more pleasant experience for all. The little changes that you might make, font, color combinations, size, etc. make it better for everyone.

At ReadPal we’ve tried to quantify this. Reading comfort is subjective and hard to measure. So to put an actual figure on it we used reading-speed as a proxy. It stands to reason that simple changes that enable you to read the same text faster means that you read it more easily and comfortably.


We found that people can read up to twice as fast if the text is presented in the most eye-friendly way. We took a Microsoft standard, Time New Roman font, size 10 , one column across the screen and compared people’s reading speed to their favorite ReadPal mode. The results were dramatic. And this was with people with apparently ‘normal’ sight.

Accessible reading and usability
We recommend that you try it yourself. Use a long text as the eye tires as you go on. Compare the Microsoft standard format with your favourite from ReadPal. (Use the double column mode if you are new to ReadPal for this test - but the more experienced will be able to get even better results with the other modes).

Interestingly, the changes that allow ‘normal’-sighted people to read faster are the exact changes that allow the visually-impaired to read your text too. Happy co-incidence. So when you think of accessibility you make life better for us all.

To take the test just download ReadPal. (It is free to the consumer).

Lastly, Steve Krug would be one of my heroes on Web-design. Jeffrey Zeldman wrote an excellent blog on him that is well worth visiting.

Happy reading.

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Accessibility and glare - solution for your screen problems

glare and accessibility

Glare is a huge problem for many of us reading on computer screens. The easiest way to eliminate it is to use the black-out mode of ReadPal when reading. When used with a large font this is so effective you can even read outside!

We find that 25% grey on a black background is better than white text. It is less jarring on the eyes and the ‘after-image’ is not so troublesome.

ReadPal is now completely free for the consumer so download it and start reading with less glare.glare reduction and reading

There is a nice list of tip to reduce glare by James Yeang on the Friedbeef’s Tech Blog .

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Accessibility? A fresh solution for computer reading

This is how clearly you could read with ReadPal!

You take control over how you read. Be it Webpages, text documents, emails or Word documents. You can read them all in clear, large fonts with your preferred colour combinations. Just press the ReadPal button to read this way.
I like to read with the font size 48, Tahoma in the ‘Black-Out’ mode. This minimises glare and visual stress - I even read in bed this way!
Accessible reading of webpage

ReadPal is now free for consumers and can be set up in a couple of minutes. Visit the site. I’ll be blogging here again on accessibility issues so do revisit. Another good blog to check out is Matt Bailey’s Accessibility Blog

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