There's also a problem from the accessibility standpoint. You can't
know if a user of your product does or does not have some sort of
color-blindness or other visual impariment. The best case for the
user is for every color (and font, and font-size) you use by default
to be customizable to whatever colors work best for them.  From the
perspective of an accessibility specialist, any color that cannot
easily be changed by the user is "hard-coded" and a bad usability
experience.


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Posted from the new ixda.org
http://www.ixda.org/discuss?post=43676


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