Need for Web Accessibility during Pandemic
Post pandemic every business small or large is moving to online for the safety of people and for the sake of running business.
Post pandemic every business small or large is moving to online for the safety of people and for the sake of running business.
"Viable" Implies Usable: Distinguishing clearly between "feature-poor" and "hard to use." An MVP can have fewer features, but the few that exist must work flawlessly.
Minimizing Cognitive Load: Every unnecessary element—whether it's a heavy border, a redundant icon, or excessive color—competes for the user's attention.
The Law of Diminishing Returns: Debunking the myth that you need an expensive lab and 50 participants to get data.
The Interface as a Conversation: Shifting the perspective to view every UI interaction as a dialogue between the user and the system.
Content-First Design: Debunking the "Lorem Ipsum" habit. Designing a layout without real content is like designing a container without knowing what it needs to hold.
The "Slice" vs. The "Skeleton": Explaining that an MVP isn't a broken product with half the features; it's a complete, smaller product.
Jakob’s Law: Users spend most of their time on other sites.
The Manifesto in Action: Understanding Mozilla's core philosophy—that the internet is a global public resource—and how your contributions directly fight for user privacy, decentral
The Request/Response Lifecycle: Demystifying what happens between hitting "Enter" in the URL bar and seeing a page—breaking down DNS resolution, the HTTP handshake, and how servers
An overview of my experience scaling global teams, managing operations, and my evolution from technical architecture to executive leadership.
Deep dives into digital accessibility, team scaling strategies, and the technical challenges of building inclusive web architectures.
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