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Professional content on accessibility, laws & technology
How Israeli Accessibility Standards Differ from WCAG
Israel's SI 5568 standard strengthens WCAG 2.0 requirements for media, captions, and structural headings—raising key cri...
Understanding WCAG 2.X: The Global Web Accessibility Standard
WCAG 2.X is the international standard for web accessibility, defining four core principles and three compliance levels...
Color Blindness: Design for Accessibility
Color blindness affects millions worldwide. If color is your only way to communicate information, you're excluding users...
Rule 17: Clear Hierarchy Creates Smooth Experience
A clear hierarchy—whether through headings, logical grouping, or consistent structure—is far more important than colors...
Rule 18: Design Consistency Matters
Consistent design creates order, builds trust, and makes your site accessible to everyone. Learn why predictable interfa...
Rule 16: A Consistent, Clear Zone for Error Messages
Effective error messages transform frustration into understanding. When they're clear, accessible, and positioned well,...
Rule 14 – Buttons and Links: Making Them Actually Clickable
Small buttons and links are hard to click. Expand clickable areas, especially in dense button regions, to ensure every u...
Rule 11: Getting Contrast Right
Good contrast isn't just about aesthetics—it's critical for readability and accessibility. Proper color contrast makes t...
Accessibility Rule #13 – Backward Compatibility
When designing a website, always consider users who didn't choose the latest technology — they simply use what they have...
Rule #12 – Mirroring: How to Build Smart Multilingual Interfaces
Switching languages isn't just translation — it means flipping the entire interface direction. Learn how proper RTL/LTR...
Rule #10 – Give Users Control Over Moving Content
Moving content like sliders, news tickers, and auto-playing videos can become a serious accessibility barrier when users...
Rule #8 – Translating the Message: Why Captions Matter
Good captions do more than improve comprehension — they open your content to a whole new audience and give your search e...
Rule #2 – Design for the Operating System's Built-In Accessibility
True accessibility starts by working with the technology users already have. Supporting OS-level accessibility features...
Rule #7 – Give Users Control
Not all users see the same thing — give them control over text size, color, and contrast to improve readability and deli...
Rule #6 – Supporting Diverse Output Options for Accessible UX
Accessibility doesn't stop at the input — your system's responses must be equally accessible. Learn how to support diver...
Accessibility Rule #5 – Support a Wide Range of Input Methods
Want a truly accessible interface? Design it to work without a mouse at all — then verify it stays intuitive and efficie...
Rule #4 – Full Keyboard Accessibility Support
If your website can't be used with a keyboard alone, it isn't truly accessible. Learn why keyboard support is a fundamen...
Rule #3 – Personalized User Experience
A system that adapts to its users is a system people love to come back to. Discover how personalization drives satisfact...
Is Website Animation Accessible? What You Need to Know
Animations can make your website look impressive, but they come with accessibility responsibilities. Learn when you must...
Adding Accessibility to Your Website: What We Actually Check
Real web accessibility starts with the small details — like accurate alt text for clickable images, full keyboard naviga...
Rule #1 of UX Design: Start With Inclusive Specifications
Inclusive design begins with one question: who are we currently leaving out — and how can we bring them in?