Re: [JAWS-Users] accessibility for screen readers

2015-12-27 Thread Jim Pursley
I think that The Post defaults to a printable page when the 
accessibility link is clicked.  The New York Times has no such link but 
you can get accessibility by clicking View Mobile Site. I'm not aware of 
an accessibility philosopher's stone, though, beyond specific 
accessibility links, mobile sites or printfriendly.com. The latter is a 
great resource for reading or saving web pages in a format that omits 
links, tweets, etc.  Printfriendly also creates pdf's from their print 
output.  Getting the printfriendly tool on a browser is a bit of a drag 
(literally...drag and drop by mouse) but the ite has a form field where 
you can copy a web page url and print from there.  All good stuff.  
Speaking of accessibility, anyone know of a good translation tool?  I 
find Bing and Google problematic for JAWS.


On 12/27/2015 10:02 AM, leonard morris wrote:
The Washington Post webpages have a link called accessibility for 
screen readers. This removes many of the pictures and unrelated 
grapphics and links to make the article much more screen reader 
friendly. Is there a program that can turn a webpage into an 
accessible screen reader page like what the Washington Post has 
available?




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[JAWS-Users] accessibility for screen readers

2015-12-27 Thread leonard morris
The Washington Post webpages have a link called accessibility for screen 
readers. This removes many of the pictures and unrelated grapphics and 
links to make the article much more screen reader friendly. Is there a 
program that can turn a webpage into an accessible screen reader page 
like what the Washington Post has available?


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