Tomorrow, SCOTUS will hear an accessibility case — specifically around "standing," or who has grounds to sue. Though SCOTUS's opinion isn't expected until next year, it will address whether civil rights testers, many of whom are disabled themselves, can sue businesses for having inaccessible websites, or if instead, you must have been an intended customer to have standing. @449e0f08's post on this is worth the read!
https://www.lflegal.com/2023/10/acheson-tester-standing-case/
#a11y #accessibility
#11ty / #Jamstack friends: what are your preferred methods for automatically rebuilding your static site daily (or at some other regular interval)?
This is just one step in an overall demo for a meetup, so I'd prefer not to have to focus on it too heavily. Bonus points if it's simple, intuitive, and reproducible at home.
Tired: Waiting for native tabs/tabpanels in HTML so you don't have to reach for as much JavaScript.
Wired: Waiting for native tabs/tabpanels in HTML so that RSS readers can support your tab widgets, too.
@365a528d We recently established a quiet room at our board game nights, for people to get away from the noise and hang out with the cat instead.
10/10, would absolutely recommend for any gathering.
Notes by 4bae09cd | export