Developing steady clicks:: a method of cursor assistance for people with motor impairments
Proceedings of the 8th international ACM SIGACCESS conference on Computers and accessibility
W4A '07 Proceedings of the 2007 international cross-disciplinary conference on Web accessibility (W4A)
Senior surfers 2.0: a re-examination of the older web user and the dynamic web
UAHCI'07 Proceedings of the 4th international conference on Universal access in human computer interaction: coping with diversity
Using galvanic skin response measures to identify areas of frustration for older web 2.0 users
Proceedings of the 2010 International Cross Disciplinary Conference on Web Accessibility (W4A)
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Many modern Web pages update parts of their content, and this is often automatic. This allows a 'clean' user-interface and information-rich pages. Keeping up with updates or recovering from mistakes can be a problem, however, as it is often not possible to revert a page to a previous state. This can be particularly problematic for users with poor literacy or cognitive disabilities, the elderly, or for users of assistive technologies. For pages that use these technologies to be truly accessible for all, they must afford users sufficient control over updates, to allow them to read and use the information available before it disappears forever. While applying good practice during page design and implementation can provide this, there are many pages for which information changes too rapidly for the user. We propose to supplement assistive technologies with a Web page 'time machine' that will allow users to review all the states a page has been in, and to step backwards or forwards through these states at their own pace.