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In Mechanical engineering contexts

2006-10-30 11:05:51 · 4 answers · asked by Akinbiyi B 1 in Science & Mathematics Engineering

4 answers

dictonary.com it really works!! try it!

2006-10-30 11:07:00 · answer #1 · answered by kooimanlora 2 · 0 0

The answer in a computer science context is:
How well people can use a computer program despite handicaps (like being blind, deaf, mentally handicapped etc.).

Since this is a topic of user interfaces, i'd guess it applies the same way in mechanical engineering also:
How well people can use a machine despite handicaps. (Example: if your machine requires a person to hit two buttons at once that are far apart, having short arms would make the machine inaccesible; or if a machine status light changes from green to red when something goes wrong, a colorblind person would not know the difference, thus the machine is less accessible to them).

2006-10-30 16:20:15 · answer #2 · answered by w1234cj 1 · 0 0

nancy pelosi to liberal lobbyists and special interests..if that doesnt define accessiblity, then it isnt defineable.

2006-10-30 11:10:27 · answer #3 · answered by koalatcomics 7 · 0 0

umm...people need to have certain stuff so they make ACCESSIBILITY stuff.

2006-10-30 11:08:09 · answer #4 · answered by Ənigma 2 · 0 0

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