Accessibility 2020 [accessibility a11y]
“I took the time to ‘bang-on’ about the convergence of devices and people such that assistive technology would be - in the end - just another user device; pushing the aspects of extreme customisation, adaptation, and personalisation - all of which I think future accessibility issues are really all about.”
I was recently in Brussels for a meeting at the EU commission as an invited expert on the eAccessibility2020 project. Now this project has some similarities with work in progress at the W3C WAI RDWG in looking at future accessibility and surrounding issues:
The study on eAccessibility2020 (“Study on Implications from Future ICT Trends on Assistive Technology and Accessibility”, SMART 2010/0077) aims to provide the EC with recommendations on future research policy, especially regarding FP8 (ICT & FET) and the next Competitiveness & Innovation Programme (CIP). Also, the study will make suggestions on relevant standardisation issues and on EC policy activities for the wider mainstreaming and adoption of eAccessibility. To do so the study team will elaborate and validate specific use and technology-scenarios for 2020. These scenarios will result from vigorous interaction with eAccessibility-related stakeholders and experts, which will involve among other the identification and assessment of ‘Drivers of Change’ affecting the course of eAccessibility (i.e. key-trends, micro-trends and weak-signals). The study approach adopts a variety of methodologies, tools and activities and it is presented at www.e-accessibility2020.eu together with news, e-surveys and eventually the study results.
Along with Yeliz, I’d already been interviewed over the space of an hour about our views. I took the time to ‘bang-on’ about the convergence of devices and people such that assistive technology would be - in the end - just another user device; pushing the aspects of extreme customisation, adaptation, and personalisation - all of which I think future accessibility issues are really all about. Indeed I see this future as being the reason why I do accessibility - in general it is hard, non-trivial, work beyond both ‘plumbing’ or ’toys’.
Web accessibility is really just an ‘über–use–case’ because in the end we will all be disabled by the technology or the environment. Indeed, work on Web accessibility is helping us address many other domains including those centred around user mobility and digital inclusion. For instance, by applying the same technology used to counter a physically disabled users tremors and jerky movements to the mobile Web, the operational problems of mobile interaction in moving environments are being addressed. Similarly, mobile Web access suffers from the interoperability and usability problems that make the Web as difficult to interact with for main–stream users as it is for visually impaired users. Again, solutions proposed 3–4 years ago in the Web accessibility community are now being applied to main–stream mobile devices.
Why not have a look at the ‘2020’ project and contribute to their surveys - in this way we can better predict and define our own future.
