Centre for Inclusive Design alongside the University of South Australia, hosts one of the world’s only University-accredited professional certificate in web accessibility.
What we are up to (page 8)
How to find accessible media and web browsers
Information for accessible media resources and details of accessibility features in browsers.
I’m not a robot
CAPTCHA stands for Completely Automated Public Turing Test to tell Computers and Humans apart and it’s a way to filter out bots and fraudulent automated activity from the behaviour of real people. It’s an umbrella term describing several different techniques…
I am not a unicorn: stop hiring autistic people for the wrong reasons
Believe me, I want you to hire autistic people. As an autistic job seeker myself, I can tell you that it’s pretty tough out here. I’ve been searching for 2.5 years now with no success. The job market is a…
Inclusive design report
World-first report “The Benefit of Designing for Everyone”: Research reveals inclusive design can expand customer reach fourfold
B & T: How one change can quadruple your reach
This article was originally published on B&T Businesses that design their products and services with social inclusivity in mind will experience far greater reach than those that don’t, says tech giants. Research launched today by the Centre for Inclusive Design…
Marketing Mag: Huge financial and social benefits to inclusive design, report shows
This article was originally published in Marketing Mag A new report shows inclusively designed products and services could benefit the Australian retail sector alone by as much as $4 billion. Commissioned by the Centre for Inclusive Design in partnership with…
AdNews: Adobe and Microsoft back inclusive design research
This article was originally published in AdNews Adobe and Microsoft have partnered with the Centre for Inclusive Design to commission The Benefit of Designing for Everyone report conducted by PwC. The research found products and services designed with the needs…
A friendly face for low vision airport travellers
In an Australian first, Sydney Airport is helping blind and low vision travellers to navigate the airport. CEO, Geoff Culbert says, “it’s all about making the airport experience easier and more accessible for our passengers”.
The beautiful game has an ugly side
The World game, the beautiful game, football, soccer, religion, whatever you want to call it — it is the game that is on more TV screens, in more fields and more stadiums than any other game across the globe. It…