I agree with what Derek says, and he sums it up nicely.

I have been using accesskeys since WCAG1 came out mid 99, and can cause more
usability problems that provides ease of accessibility.  I even use <span>
to underline the key letter to indicate the access key, which is the
standard way to show an access key, and the feedback I got was that most
people think there is some sort of browser display problem when they see it.
They are used to seeing this type of thing in application software, but not
on the web.  In cases like this, when I get this type of feedback, I think
users are right, because it ends up being too foreign an interface for them
when deployed rarely, then on top of that, you have the erratic behaviour.
If they associate erratic behaviour with your web site, then what impression
are you giving (... those crazy accessibility people:-)).

It also seems that users require accesskeys and use them in different ways
on the web than are used by applications software.  In applications software
it is mainly used for hotkeys and navigation, whereas it seems that most
users requiring them for accessibility would prefer that they be designated
for prime operations, ie form navigation rather than site navigation.

I'm not saying there is anything bad about accesskeys or the idea behind
them, but the way they have been implemented by user agents ... (and also us
designers) has created a bit of a mess.  It's a pity.

I still use them, but more and more sparingly.  Mainly for forms.  But I
think this is a good idea that has to evolve somehow before it becomes
reasonably usable.  But maybe the implementation is just not suited to the
web.

Geoff

> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Wednesday, 28 July 2004 9:44 AM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: [WSG] access keys and tab index
>
>
>
> Hi ted,
> recommend you read (if you haven't already) this article
>
> More reasons why we don't use accesskeys:
> http://www.wats.ca/articles/accesskeyconflicts/37
>
>

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