-----Original Message-----
From: Kathy E. Gill <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

>(1) The entire bloody world can't USE graphical browsers. My blind
>professional speaker friend just LOVES sites like this.

>(2) The "accessible" thing to do is to put a LINK to a non-framed version
>of the site in the <noframes> tags. SEE W3C accessibility guidelines AND
>how frames are properly code to be HTML 4.0 compliant.


First of all, frames should only be used if the target audience is
frames-capable. If your audience is home users who are using WebTV or older
versions of browsers, then don't do frames. Many home users are reluctant to
upgrade their browsers or they don't know how to upgrade.

If your audience is using current browsers, or they are the kind of user who
knows how to upgrade, then frames are okay to implement.

As for non-framed versions: the point isn't to make a site that is
accessible to every single imaginable user (one can't translate a site into
all three thousand human languages, incl. Navaho, Apache, etc.) One should
have a specific target audience in mind and then produce the site towards
that audience.
___________________________________________________
Andreas Ramos    [EMAIL PROTECTED]    www.andreas.com



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