Hi Elizabeth,

Loved the Tech Talk, got us thinking about a lot of the elements in RCE. I was curious how much you deal with web standards. I spent a great deal of time formatting one specific webpage to be as standards-compliant /and/ accessible as possible, which meant following HTML5 and ARIA for the most part. They have a test tool here: http://wave.webaim.org/ but it doesn't cover everything.

I learned that certain formatting can assist people with dyslexia, and there are guidelines to improve their user experience: http://www.bdadyslexia.org.uk/about-dyslexia/further-information/dyslexia-style-guide.html.

I concluded that it would essentially require a separate CSS file, and a little JS maybe to allow users to switch between the two. But other wise doable I think. (Sadly I didn't quite get that far myself, and there doesn't seem to be any other guidelines for this.)

Any thoughts on something like this? Are there other visual/neurological impairments that you've come across that websites can format for?

Brad