Dear #adhd folks, what do you consider as adhd-friendly blog design in terms of readability, information positioning and separation and such? Of course I have my own preferences, but maybe there's something I haven't thought about (except of course such basic things like no popups, flashy autoplayed videos and similar).
Blort™ 🐀Ⓥ🥋☣️
in reply to szpon • • •Minimal distractions, ie when I click to read an article, I'd really like to see *nothing* but the content of the article until at the very least, the end of the article.
Whitespace around text and images (room to think / somewhere to park my eyes while thinking)
Paragraphs can deal with complex ideas and wording, but keep them short. I don't want to try and keep a book in my working memory.
Slightly oversized text so I don't get distracted when visually losing my place.
#ADHD
szpon
in reply to Blort™ 🐀Ⓥ🥋☣️ • • •Blort™ 🐀Ⓥ🥋☣️
in reply to szpon • • •To be honest I never look at any table of contents. They're always so generic that they never really tell me if I'm going to find anything new or not. I'm more likely to just scroll down, skimming through the content looking for interesting bits, so large subsection titles, images and oversize, short quotations are more likely to draw me in.
I do love it when people can give links to specific parts of an article (literally HTML link elements) so I'm taken straight to the good bits.
LPS
in reply to szpon • •szpon likes this.