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Hosting Your Virtual Events
With COVID-19 and a shift to remote work, UCSF events such as Friday Town Hall Meetings, large training presentations, conventions, press conferences, and emergency communications go virtual with live broadcasts and live streaming.
- Affiliate
- Faculty
- Non-UCSF
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- Student
- Technical Partner
- Web Services
PDF Accessibility
It is as easy to create a PDF document as it is to print a document. If you are only printing, then how the document looks is your only concern. However, sending that PDF document via email or putting it on a website creates different concerns.Once the PDF becomes a "digital document," it is subject to the same accessibility standards as all digital documents at UCSF.
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- Faculty
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- Student
- Technical Partner
- Volunteer
- Web Services
Forms Accessibility
Forms are one of the most common places where accessibility problems occur.Screen readers and keyboard-only users will have issues if you do not take steps to ensure your forms are accessible. An accessible form is one that contains labeled form fields and buttons. Those labels also appear on-screen so that information is available to all users. All form fields and buttons must have explicit labels for the visual user plus in the code.
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- Faculty
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- Technical Partner
- Volunteer
- Web Services
Images Accessibility
A blind or visually impaired person can use a screen reader to hear a description of the image. If the written content contains the information needed to convey meaning, a very simple description in the image or perhaps even a null alt attribute will do. If not, make sure your alt tag information or surrounding body text is adequate to supply meaning that would be missed in its absence.
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- Faculty
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- Student
- Technical Partner
- Volunteer
- Web Services
Color Accessibility
People with visual impairments interpret color and contrast differently. That makes it difficult or impossible for them to access information communicated only by color.For example, to a user with red/green color blindness, a green image on a red background will not provide enough distinction to make the image visible. This type of color treatment also makes it difficult for some users to read text or identify links that are a different color but don’t have underlines.
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- Faculty
- Non-UCSF
- Staff
- Technical Partner
- Volunteer
- Web Services
How to create a URL shortcut on the IT website
- Technical Partner
macOS Support Status at UCSF
Operating System (OS)AppleRelease DateUCSF ITSupport StatusStart ofUCSF IT Support*End of
UCSF Adobe Licensing
table, th, td { border: 1px solid black; border-collapse: collapse; } UCSF has a licensing agreement (ETLA) with Adobe for Devices used for UCSF Business and UCSF-owned devices which allows UCSF to purchase Adobe products at a discounted rate. For Learners, devices not used for UCSF business and not owned by UCSF will need to purchase licenses directly from Adobe. For Learners: Adobe Creative Cloud for students and teachers | Adobe Creative Cloud
IT Website Content: Best Practices
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- Staff
- Technical Partner
Jamf Pro at UCSF
Jump to "How can I tell if my Mac is enrolled in UCSF Jamf Pro"
- Affiliate
- Faculty
- Staff
- Technical Partner
- Desktop Support