First I will past the link then under the link I will post the information.

Read the information before using the link.

http://labs.google.com/accessible/

Accessible Search FAQ

What is Google Accessible Search?
Accessible Search is an early Google Labs product designed to identify and
prioritize search results that are more easily usable by blind and visually
impaired users. Regular Google search helps you find a set of documents
that is most relevant to your tasks. Accessible Search goes one step
further by helping you find the most accessible pages in that result set.

How does Accessible Search work?
In its current version, Google Accessible Search looks at a number of
signals by examining the HTML markup found on a web page. It tends to favor
pages that degrade gracefully --- pages with few visual distractions and
pages that are likely to render well with images turned off. Google
Accessible Search is built on Google Co-op's technology, which improves
search results based on specialized interests.

Why is Google offering this?
Accessible Search is a natural and important extension of Google's overall
mission to better organize the world's information and make it universally
accessible. Google Accessible Search is designed to help the visually
impaired find the most relevant, useful and comprehensive information, as
quickly as possible.

In the past, visually impaired Google users have often waded through a lot
of inaccessible websites and pages to find the required information. Our
goal is to provide a more useful and accessible web search experience for
the blind and visually impaired.

How do you decide which sites are "accessible" and which are not?
Broadly, Google defines accessible websites and pages as content that the
blind and visually impaired can use and consume using standard online
technology, and we've worked with a number of organizations to determine
which websites and pages meet those criteria. Our methods for identifying
accessible pages and content are always evolving; Currently we take into
account several factors, including a given page's simplicity, how much
visual imagery it carries and whether or not its primary purpose is
immediately viable with keyboard navigation.

How can sites make their content more accessible to the blind?
Some of the basic recommendations on how to make a website more usable and
accessible include keeping Web pages easy to read, avoiding visual clutter
-- especially extraneous content -- and ensuring that the primary purpose
of the Web page is immediately accessible with full keyboard navigation.
There are many organizations and online resources that offer Website owners
and authors guidance on how to make websites and pages more accessible for
the blind and visually impaired. The W3C publishes numerous guidelines
including Web Content Access Guidelines that are helpful for Website owners
and authors. Broad adherence to these guidelines is one way of ensuring
that sites are universally accessible.

Does Accessible Search Filter Out Inaccessible Content?
No. First of all accessible is a very subjective measure --- what's more,
queries can vary widely with respect to how accessible the results are. As
an example, if you are looking for information such as weather forecasts or
reference material such as the definition of an unfamiliar term, the result
set often consists of both accessible and inaccessible content. In these
cases, Google Accessible Search promotes those results that have been
measured to be more accessible. On the other hand, if the particular query
is about video games, the chances are fairly high that a majority of the
best results for that query will be visually busy pages. So in the final
analysis, we never filter content in Google Accessible Search; we pick the
best results exactly as we do with regular Google search, and then re-order
the top results by their level of accessibility.

The Result Set Looks Identical To Regular Search?
The operational word in the above question is looks. Google Accessible
Search does not in any way change the look and feel of Google search
results. What it does (see earlier question) is to re-order results based
on how accessible they are.

Navigating Search Results
After Google Accessible Search was launched, many of our users sent us
feedback about the results page (both Google Accessible and regular search)
being difficult to navigate with screenreaders. In response, we have
updated the results page in both cases to have section headers that can be
used in conjunction with screenreader hotkeys to quickly skim through the
page. Thus, once Google has responded to your search query, use your access
technology's "move by section" keys to move between the section that
displays sponsored ads and the individual results.

How Can I Perform More Complex Searches?
Notice that
http://labs.google.com/accessible
has a link to Advanced Search
in addition to the simple text box. Use this link to access Google Advanced
Search --- this provides you the ability to focus your search on documents
in a specific language. The resulting search will continue to use Google
Accessible Search for ordering the results.

How Can I Compare Regular Search With Google Accessible?
Google Accessible Search is an experiment, and to be an effective
experiment, end-users need to be able to easily compare the results
obtained by using regular Google search vs Google Accessible. Notice that
the top of the results page contains a pair of radio buttons labeled Web
Search and Accessible Search you can easily repeat your search by pressing
the appropriate radio button and clicking on the submit button.

How Can I Make My Site Rank Higher?
And finally, for the ever popular question that everyone likes to ask. As
with regular search, the best thing you can do with respect to making your
site rank highly is to create good content. In fact you can think of
GoogleBot as the world's most influential blind user --- the content that
matters most to our indexing technology --- good quality text --- is what
blind users hear when using spoken output. I highly recommend Google's
Guidelines for Webmasters as a starting point. Once you've ensured you've
fully addressed these, I'd suggest reviewing your content to see how well
it degrades gracefully with respect to end-user abilities. As a simple
example, try the following additional checks (in addition to viewing the
page in text-only mode as suggested by the Google Webmaster Guidelines):

Try browsing your site on a monochrome display
Try using your site without a mouse
How Can I Make Accessible Search My Default Home Page
Here is the short answer for IE and Firefox. Assuming that you are on the
Accessible Search page, the following key sequence: Alt+t, o, Alt+c, Enter
should make that your default home page. This sequence is the same for both
IE and Firefox.

Here is a more detailed explanation of what the above achieves.

On IE, go to Tools, Internet Options, and under the General tab in the Home
Page area, click the "Use Current" button. Note that the General tab is the
default tab when Internet Options first comes up.

On Firefox, go to Tools, Options, and under the Main tab in the Startup
area, click the "Use Current Pages" button. Note that the Main tab is the
default tab when Options first comes up.

Google Home - Accessible Search - Feedback - Terms of Use

©2007 Google Inc.


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