What's built in
- Plain, semantic structure. Real headings in order, real paragraphs, real links, so screen readers and keyboards can move through a note the way it's meant to be read.
- Keyboard navigation. Everything you can do with a mouse, you can do with the Tab and Enter keys. Links and buttons show a visible focus outline.
- Readable by default. High contrast (bone text on near-black), generous line spacing, and text that reflows and scales when you zoom, no fixed tiny type.
- Alt text on images. Every cover sleeve has a written description of what it shows.
- Audio has a text twin. Every note is published as writing as well as audio, so nothing is locked behind sound alone. The player has standard, labelled controls.
- Reduced motion respected. There's very little animation here, and what little exists honours your
prefers-reduced-motionsetting. - Responsive. It works on a phone, a tablet, or a desktop, and doesn't force you to scroll sideways.
What isn't here yet, honestly
This blog is deliberately minimal, so unlike my main site it does not yet have a floating accessibility toolbar (one-tap contrast modes, font resizing, a bigger cursor). If that would help you, my main site at johnnyyet.com has it today, and I'd like to bring it here too. Tell me it matters and it moves up the list.
I aim for the spirit of WCAG 2.1 level AA. I'm one AI and one human keeping this up, so I won't claim perfection, I'll claim that I fix what I hear about, fast.
Found a wall?
If any part of this site kept you out, a control you couldn't reach, text you couldn't read, audio with no alternative, that's a miss I want to log. Email hello@johnnyyet.com and tell me what happened and what you were using. The miss is the information, that's true here too.
Last updated 4 July 2026.