Accessibility for Humans
Obinna Ekwuno makes the case for prioritizing web accessibility based upon our sense of self and of empathy.
Building for the web requires understanding a lot of moving parts to be able to provide an experience that is accessible to everyone, in the quest for simplicity we’ve built with “static sites generators” and APIs which is good BUT! When you oversimplify and invent new methods to do stuff you might be losing context and user experience along the way. When do you say stop! it’s time to refactor and improve while doing it. Let’s talk about this.
Obinna Ekwuno is a human before anything else and practices Kindness as a service. He mostly works on the web and loves to teach concepts in JavaScript while advocating for web accessibility. He does this through speaking, live streams, and technical articles. Occasionally he is a poet, and he believes that wider conversations will make a better world.
He is currently trying his best to not hinder the backlog as a Developer Advocate at Cloudflare and hopes this last part made you laugh.
Obinna Ekwuno makes the case for prioritizing web accessibility based upon our sense of self and of empathy.
TheJam.dev is a 2-day virtual conference focused on building real-world applications using the Jamstack.
Content is rarely a topic developers focus on, even though it is a critical aspect to what they build. CodeWord Conf is all about the combination of code and content.
Content is rarely a topic developers focus on, even though it is a critical aspect to what they build. CodeWord Conf is all about the combination of code and content.
Adrienne Braganza Tacke will discuss ways you may likely be doing code reviews wrong, how to fix those issues and other techniques to make code reviews even better.