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    cazabon@mindly.socialC
    One #accessibility issue I mention frequently is web designers, presumably for aesthetic reasons, making low-contrast colour choices. It also frequently goes along with selecting a #font so small that only people with excellent vision (and no #presbyopia) can read them, even if the #contrast were higher.Here's an example. I'm not pointing out the software in question, even though you could identify it easily, because this isn't a dunk on that project, specifically.This is the reference #documentation for an API, a small excerpt from the navigation links that run down a column on the left side of the page. The #text is darkish #grey on a lighter grey background. The contrast is terrible, particularly ignoring the highlighted entry because that's bolded as the current selection.If you have #cataracts or any other #vision problem, you're going to have trouble with this. But it gets worse.That text is 7 pixels high. On my monitors, it's 3 mm high. Ridiculous. Note that if you have fine motor-control problems or use alternative input devices, these are also extremely difficult to click on.Here's the kicker: for this site, I have Firefox set to #scale the text up to 133%. That 7 pixels / 3 mm is *after* enlarging it.#Web folks, please try to remember that not everyone is a twenty-something able-bodied person with zero accessibility issues.#WebDesign #WebDesigner #usability #readability #legibility #WebPage
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    chewie@mammut.gogreenit.netC
    A couple of weeks ago, I went to the Museum of Flight (https://www.nms.ac.uk/national-museum-of-flight) at East Fortune near #Edinburgh One of the displays on offer (https://www.openstreetmap.org/way/229158299) was about the R34 Airship (https://thehistorypress.co.uk/article/the-r34-airship/).The metal "rope stowing panel" (I made that up), looks like it was all written in #Gorton, and thought @mwichary might approve #Font