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Accessibility


 

Accessibility is about designing an accessible website to ensure that its content is available to the maximum number of visitors, including people with disabilities, regardless of the technology they are using. The five main types of disabilities that affect Internet usage are:

  • Visual impairments
  • Hearing impairments
  • Mobility impairments
  • Cognitive impairments
  • Seizure disorders

In 1999, the UK Government's Disability Discrimination Act 1995 was extended to cover all "Goods, Facilities and Services" provided by UK businesses.

This means that if your web site provides a service, you may be liable to legal action if you do not take all reasonable steps to ensure that the service is available to people with disabilities.

We don't consider accessibility to be optional - it makes obvious sense to ensure your site can be used by the widest possible range of people. Therefore, we build sites to UK Government, RNIB, and W3C Standards, and incorporates features to ensure that every visitor can access information (including providing alternative text descriptions, using simple and intuitive site navigation, labelling elements clearly, and producing logical page structures).

 

 

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Painting Holker Hall

Gordon Wilkinson captures the beauty of Holker Hall and its surrounding village

 PEOPLE will often give you a sympathetic smile if you tell them you live over the shop. After all, there must be more to life than work. But when that shop is the Holker Hall estate, suddenly it becomes a much more attractive proposition.
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The Lakes In Summer

Alan Novelli takes a photographic tour of Lakeland as summer gets underway...

WE all know that just because the calendar says we should be digging out our summer clothes doesn’t mean the weather will behave appropriately. It still won’t be safe to go far from home without an umbrella, we will still experience all four seasons every week, sometimes every day and occasionally every hour.
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Lee Beel Photographs the Lake District

Lee Beel spent a weekend in a caravan in Windermere with his in-laws... We booked the caravan, near Toutbeck Bridge, for the following week too so we could have more time to explore. It's usually true that places of interest are bustling with visitors at the weekends and quieter during the week, so I planned to return later when there would be fewer people around. I prefer my landscape images to be free of people.  
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