Dark mode: am I inversing the lightness scale around the midpoint or sliding the scale to preserve sibling elements’ lightness relative to each other? [migrated]
![Dark mode: am I inversing the lightness scale around the midpoint or sliding the scale to preserve sibling elements' lightness relative to each other? [migrated]](https://uxsharelab.com/wp-content/themes/proxima/images/thumbnail-placeholder.gif)
Accessibility and Inclusivity: Distinctions in Experience Design
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The web is for everyone. When it is well designed. When it isn’t, it is a barrier. Creating frustration, denying access, failing to represent individuals, and disenfranchising groups. When designers and developers are successful, the web realizes its potential: working for all people. Accessible. Usable. Inclusive. But what does this actually mean for UX teams who have the power—and responsibility—to make it happen?
Accessibility and Inclusivity: Distinctions in Experience Design

The web is for everyone. When it is well designed. When it isn’t, it is a barrier. Creating frustration, denying access, failing to represent individuals, and disenfranchising groups. When designers and developers are successful, the web realizes its potential: working for all people. Accessible. Usable. Inclusive. But what does this actually mean for UX teams who have the power—and responsibility—to make it happen?