Vicki Stebbins wrote:

> Have you done any CSS aimed at braille readers? If so is there some 
> 'gotcha' with this? I'm thinking % divs for the navigation and the 
> layout is side nav so when the font resizes it can have more room to
>  move?

No, I haven't written CSS for braille.

My friend who does use braille at times, doesn't care about minor
details like font-size and visual space on screen. She can't see it
anyway :-)
She has no problems with any regular work of mine, and has overcome any
test-cases with intentional barriers I have given her.

Users with less than perfect eyesight and/or problems moving a mouse,
will welcome larger clickable areas and more space between links.
Doing much is rarely necessary - and often not even wanted by the user,
as those who can have found ways and means to use ordinary,
barrier-free, web sites.
In most cases: if it is organized to work well in Lynx[1][2], it works.

Some "super-accessible solutions" may actually make it harder for the
targeted user-group to access a page/site/application, because such
solutions "double-solve" what's already solved at the user-end. This
according to my friend who is member of one of the organizations for
people with various handicaps in Norway.

Myself: I'm not an authority in the field - I just use common sense and
try to avoid building barriers for anyone.

regards
        Georg

PS: math is the easy part. It's those 'human bugs' that complicates things.

[1]http://www.delorie.com/web/lynxview.html
[2]http://lynx.isc.org/
-- 
http://www.gunlaug.no
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