← Back to context Comment by kergonath 3 years ago I was going to post that. Either as subtext, or as explanations below, or whatever xkcd does. 4 comments kergonath Reply junon 3 years ago Xkcd uses alt text or titles, can't remember which, to pop up an accessibility tooltip. Clever and fun but it's quite dated and doesn't work on most (all?) mobile browsers. macintux 3 years ago Using mobile safari, at least, you can tap and hold to see the alt text. junon 3 years ago Ah yeah but that's not very good typical UX, is it? To have to rely on the save menu to see alt text. 1 reply →
junon 3 years ago Xkcd uses alt text or titles, can't remember which, to pop up an accessibility tooltip. Clever and fun but it's quite dated and doesn't work on most (all?) mobile browsers. macintux 3 years ago Using mobile safari, at least, you can tap and hold to see the alt text. junon 3 years ago Ah yeah but that's not very good typical UX, is it? To have to rely on the save menu to see alt text. 1 reply →
macintux 3 years ago Using mobile safari, at least, you can tap and hold to see the alt text. junon 3 years ago Ah yeah but that's not very good typical UX, is it? To have to rely on the save menu to see alt text. 1 reply →
junon 3 years ago Ah yeah but that's not very good typical UX, is it? To have to rely on the save menu to see alt text. 1 reply →
Xkcd uses alt text or titles, can't remember which, to pop up an accessibility tooltip. Clever and fun but it's quite dated and doesn't work on most (all?) mobile browsers.
Using mobile safari, at least, you can tap and hold to see the alt text.
Ah yeah but that's not very good typical UX, is it? To have to rely on the save menu to see alt text.
1 reply →