> 2. Increase the contrast of the text in the description - as a (slightly) older person reading large blocks of light grey text on a light grey background is hard going.
I'd love to see some decent research on this. I'd like to see what the eyesight is like for the average web designer, compared to the average eyesight for the general population.
Here were not talking about people who meet the level of "visual impairment" - they may wear glasses, but their nowhere near meeting requirements to be counted as disabled.
Yet very many websites make the mistake of having either light text on a bright background, or of having a bright white background and black text.
There's also the factor that web-designers generally do their work on high-quality, big monitors (and an environment that doesn't impair viewing, etc etc). Some of them probably do test their designs on other monitors? Like you'd maybe also test your web-application on a low-powered machine.
Anyway, a lot of them probably also don't, but still a lot of the general public has less than optimal viewing conditions.
And ashwoods, I'd also be interested in that research if you can dig up that you find particularly illustrative.
(anecdotal: I often enough open the Inspector tool to disable a `body { color: #555; }` style definition, myself)
I'd love to see some decent research on this. I'd like to see what the eyesight is like for the average web designer, compared to the average eyesight for the general population.
Here were not talking about people who meet the level of "visual impairment" - they may wear glasses, but their nowhere near meeting requirements to be counted as disabled.
Yet very many websites make the mistake of having either light text on a bright background, or of having a bright white background and black text.
A vision-simulation mode plug in might be useful.