Sites & Blogs
- 2ality JavaScript and more - Axel Rauschmayer
- 456 Berea Street - Roger Johansson
- 4Syllables - Dey Alexander
- A11ybuzz - Karl Groves et al
- A List Apart - Jeffrey Zeldman
- AccessIT - Federally funded national technical assistance center on education based accessible information technology
- Access iQ
- Alertbox - Jakob Nielsen
- AlastairC - Alastair Campbell
- Anne’s Weblog - Anne Van Kesteren
- Bloug - Lou Rosenfelds
- Brad Frost
- Deque
- Digital Media Minute - Jim Rutherfords
- Gerry McGovern
- HTML5 Doctor
- Illinois Center for Information Technology and Web Accessibility
- iHenny - Henny Swan
- InfoDesign - Peter J. Bogaards
- JimThatcher.com
- Juicy Studio - Gez Lemon
- Karl Groves
- Knowbility
- Marco’s Accessibility Blog - Marco Zehe
- Maxdesign - Russ Weakley
- Media Access Australia
- Modern Accessibility Forum - Paul J. Adam
- Molly dot com - Molly E. Holzschlag
- peterme - Peter Merholz
- QuirksBlog - Peter-Paul Koch
- Responsive Images Community Group
- Robert's talk - Robert Nyman
- Scott Berkun
- Semantics - Peter Morville
- SitePoint
- Standardista - Estelle Weyl
- Terrill Thompson
- The Paciello Group Blog
- timbl's Blog - Tim Berners-Lee
- UI Access - Shawn Lawton Henry
- Usability First
- UsabilityNet
- UsabilityNews - (BCS)
- Usability News - the Software Usability Research Laboratory (SURL)
- UXmatters - Pabini Gabriel-Petit, Publisher & Editor in Chief
- Vanseo Design - Steven Bradley
- W3C - THE place to go
for official web information. It is the authoritative source for web
standards, including accessibility standards. W3C is an industry consortium
created to develop common protocols that enhance the interoperability and
promote the evolution of the Web. W3C is jointly run by MIT Laboratory for Computer
Science (LCS) in the USA, National Institute for Research in Computer Science
and Control (INRIA) in France and Keio University in Japan.
- W3C Developers - W3C
- WAI - W3C's section to check out for Web Content Accessibility. WAI's purpose is to make the Web more accessible to people with disabilities. The WAI has five major areas of work: technology, guidelines, tools, education and outreach, and research and development.
- Wait till I come! - Christian Heilmann
- WebAIM - The Web Accessibility "How-To" Site. It is administered through a grant provided by the Learning Anywhere Anytime Program Fund for the Improvement of Postsecondary Education.
- Web Teacher - Virginia DeBolt
- WebAxe - Dennis Lembree
- Yale Web Style Guide - Patrick J. Lynch and Sarah Horton