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The nice thing is it's very easy to get started, and no matter what you're working on, be it a web project, a mobile app, or even something for desktop there are loads of resources out there, as well as people who care. For web stuff, over the last month or so I've been pointing people to the relatively new but still pretty nice A11y Style Guide[0]
This is obviously for just getting started. When we get into more complicated markup, I often find fantastic resources, articles, and examples from companies like SSB BART or Deque (no affiliation with either) When mobile accessibility comes up, few people do it better than the BBC, and they have a great resource on it[1] I'm also working on a playbook for mobile accessibility, but that's still under development. The really important and kind of awesome thing is that it's extremely easier to test the accessibility of whatever you're building as you build it. Unlike the bad old days where screen readers costs $1,000 and no developers had access to them, on mobile or Mac screen readers are built directly into your device, and on Windows NVDA is completely free from [2] Hope this gives you a starting point, and if you have more questions feel free to reach out, email in profile. [0]: https://a11y-style-guide.com
[1]http://www.bbc.co.uk/guidelines/futuremedia/accessibility/mo...
[2]https://NVAccess.org |