In message <1108655057.106445.239590 (AT) o13g2000cwo (DOT) googlegroups.com>,
cruiserweight <bayon86 (AT) yahoo (DOT) com> writes
One problem that I see is how AT (assistive technology e.g.
screen-readers, talking-browsers) users are going to navigate your site.
As you can see:
http://www.gododdin.demon.co.uk/ng/KAM04X.JPG (103k)
When a user goes to the page s/he is going to have to sit and listen to
a long list of hotel addresses being read out before they can get to the
main content. (Readers process the text in the sequence it's presented
in the HTML file.)
There's no headers at the start of the main content, so they can't use
'headings mode' reading to tab from heading-to-heading quickly.
You might want to think about providing a 'hidden' link as the first
entry on the page to let them have the option of going to the main
content.
regards.
BTW. Nice and bright layout -- goes with the theme. I'd have been
inclined, though, to have left some space between the end of the text
and the end of the browser window. When I initially read it, I tried to
scroll down further, thinking there was more text to be read ;-)
--
Jake