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by saagarjha
2739 days ago
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As the article mentions, what you’re really saying here is that “my website is not for poor people, or disabled people, or even people who are trying to kill some time before their bus arrives”. Is discriminating against these people ok with you? |
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>> Knowing who are my users allows me to do better design.
>> I do so knowing in which environments it will happen. And yes, it might means you will be excluded.
Obviously the poster here is more than okay with this. They're explicitly stating it will happen, and it's part of the plan.
The problem is when it's not part of the plan.
Imagine the author is writing an internal web tool for a corporate enterprise environment.
Imagine all of those computers and devices are standardized, and the software will only run on these devices on an intranet.
The previous poster's point is valid here. We know the users, the users are professionals, we know who they are, and we know what environments we'll be deploying in.
Therefore, of course, beyond accessibility, of course the poster wouldn't care about people trying to kill time before the bus.