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Experience the web through different abilities. Simulate vision, motor, cognitive and reading impairments. Over 1 billion people worldwide live with a disability. Funkify lets you experience the web the way they do — directly in your browser. No setup, no dev tools. Just real understanding. 👁 Vision — blur, color blindness, contrast reduction, tunnel vision, macular degeneration, and more Built-in analysis tools: Automated accessibility scanning (WCAG 2.0/2.1/2.2) and readability analysis — catch issues before your users do. Personas: Combine multiple simulators into realistic profiles that reflect real-world scenarios — like browsing the web as an elderly user with reduced vision and motor challenges. Who is Funkify for? • Developers and QA testers validating accessibility • UX/UI designers building empathy for diverse users • Web editors and communicators checking readability • Educators and schools teaching digital accessibility • Government agencies and public sector organizations • Accessibility consultants and trainers • Anyone who wants to spread awareness about web accessibility Why Funkify? ✓ Runs directly in your browser — no setup required ✓ Works on any website ✓ Team licenses with seat management for organizations ✓ Available on Chrome, Edge, Firefox, and Opera Accessibility isn't a checklist — it's understanding. Funkify helps you build that understanding.
ARC Toolkit
The ARC Toolkit is a set of accessibility tools which aids developers in identifying accessibility problems and features for WCAG 2.0, WCAG 2.1, WCAG 2.2, EN 301 549, and Section 508 The toolkit is designed to be integrated into automated and manual accessibility tests and works alongside the auditor or developer in order to simplify repetitive tasks and interactively explore accessibility features and problems. The ARC Toolkit is tightly integrated with Chrome’s Developer Tools and uses the ARC rule set, the same rules used by default in the ARC platform. This allows developers and quality assurance testers to take their ARC testing into their development environments and thoroughly investigate issues raised in ARC scans. Launched from the Developer Tools, the ARC Toolkit panel includes a set of tests that shows results both in the panel and in the page itself. Each test can be toggled on and off so types of issues can be isolated. Issues can be selected and viewed directly in the Elements panel. It runs completely local within Chrome and works within iframes, so it can evaluate any page you can browse to. If you would like to pages that are not live on a website but are in development, turn on the option to "Allow access to file URLs". Because this tool is actively used by the TPGi team, there are frequent updates as we further develop and refine the rules and features. If you would like training on how to use ARC Toolkit for testing, please contact TPGi at https://www.tpgi.com/contact/. This extension is governed by the license agreement at https://www.tpgi.com/arc-toolkit-the-service-terms-of-service/.
WCAG Color contrast checker
To check the color contrast between foreground and background of the texts It checks the color contrast between the foreground and background of the elements that are in the page according to the WCAG 2.2. It evaluates the contrast on all elements of the page considering their computed style for the color and background-color CSS properties. In case of these colors are defined with RGBA values, it also considers the opacity to deduce the real color that finally is show. It can simulate color blindness and evaluate the contrast for the simulations. By this way, developers can see how the pages look for colorblind users. The tool also includes two fields in which the colors can be introduced manually to be tested. It also allows to pick the color directly from the documents. Finally, it auto-refreshes when DOM of the page changes (addition or removing elements), but if the page has many changes, this behavior can be de-activated.
Landmark Navigation via Keyboard or Pop-up
Allows you to navigate a web page via WAI-ARIA landmarks, using the keyboard or a pop-up menu. Landmark regions broadly signpost the areas of a page (e.g. navigation, search, main content and so on). This extension allows you to navigate a web page via its landmarks, *if they've been provided by its author*, using the keyboard or a pop-up menu. The extension needs to run automatically on all pages, to find any landmark regions and put a badge on the toolbar button, or update the sidebar. This is why it requires permission to access all pages. The extension does not collect any data. As this is developed in my own time, I am not able to guarantee timely support, though will be doing what I can to help. I'll be concentrating on fixing bugs, and adding features where this makes sense. This is a fork of the original landmarks extension written by David Todd at IBM. Thanks to Steve Faulkner for encouraging me to work on this, for feature suggestions, help with the relevant specifications and initial test cases (and again to David Todd for supporting my contributions). Thanks also to The Paciello Group for donating my development time when this was a Firefox-specific extension and during the conversion to the WebExtensions API. Text and photo for the "World of Wombats" demo site are copyright Wikipedia and JJ Harrison and distributed under the CC BY-SA 3.0 licence. Details available at: http://matatk.agrip.org.uk/landmarks/world-of-wombats/#copyright-info
Accessibility Insights for Web
Accessibility Insights for Web helps developers quickly find and fix accessibility issues. The default keyboard shortcut to launch Accessibility Insights for Web is [Ctrl+Shift+K]. If that doesn't work, follow these instructions: 1. Select Shift+Alt+T to move focus to the Chrome address bar 2. Select the Left arrow key to move focus to the Accessibility Insights for Web extension. 3. Select the Space key to open the extension.