Monday 13 May 2019

How to Add Accessibility Features to Google Chrome

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If you have trouble reading text on websites, seeing specific colors, or have dyslexia, Google Chrome has accessibility features that can help. You manage them individually through various Chrome extensions available in the Web Store.

Official Google Accessibility Extensions

Google offers four official accessibility extensions that you can add to your browser from the Chrome Web Store:

  • Color Enhancer: A customizable color filter applied to webpages that improve the perception of colors for people with partial colorblindness.
  • Caret Browsing: An extension that lets you browse the text of a webpage using the arrow keys of your keyboard.
  • High ContrastChange or invert the color scheme of webpages to make it easier to read the text with the press of a button.
  • Long Description in Context MenuAdd an item to your right-click context menu that opens an image’s long description link—a special HTML attribute used by some assistive technologies to provide more information than an image’s alt-text.

To install one of these extensions, click the “Add to Chrome” button to the right of its name.

Click Add to Chrome on the extension you want to add

Read the extension’s permissions and then click “Add Extension.”

Read over the permission, then click Add Extension

After a few seconds, the extension will be installed and ready to use.

Third-Party Accessibility Extensions

If you find that the few options from Google aren’t doing it for you, the Chrome Web Store has a bunch of third-party extensions to choose from as well. Installation is the same as for official Google extensions, but they’re sorted under a different category.

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from How-To Geek http://bit.ly/308LZnU

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