Eric Liu: I've got goosebumps to Eric myself. What's a roadmap you can offer to those of us who are just wanting to really go all in on learning how to do this stuff? "I would also say that the best way to understand designing for inclusivity is to actually start doing it and to incorporate people with disabilities into all the work that you do," he says. 'If you do something new every two weeks or every month, talk to one more person that will change everything'
Derek Featherstone teaches us how designing for people with disabilities is really just better design for everybody. He shows us how people with disabilities aren’t different from us, they just use different tools to accomplish the same things. He encourages us to apply empathy to grow our skills in learning how to design for accessibility. He also reveals how taking small steps to incorporate something new into our design process could change everything.
- Origin Story (5:53)
- What Were Your “Aha” Moments? (12:02)
- Why Do We Tend to Forget About Disabled Users? (17:15)
- Tools Disabled Folks Use to Navigate (20:47)
- Accessibility, Greater Than Aesthetics (31:37)
- Has Designing for Accessibility Ever Made Things Worse for Majority of “Able” Users? (36:14)
- Story of Biggest Triumph in Designing for Inclusivity + Accessibility (42:36)
- What’s a Roadmap for Learning this Stuff? (44:56)
- Contact Info (47:35)
Check out the detailed show notes and Eli Jorgensen’s astonishing superhero artwork at userdefenders.com/051
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