Google’s popular Chrome browser has launched a new tool to help developers tune their websites for different visual deficiencies such as color blindness and blurred vision.

Mathias Bynes, a Google employee working on developer tools for Chrome, tweeted a demo video showing how you can test your website for various paucities.

Talk tech to me

Attend Europe’s leading (and most FUN) tech event TNW2020

LET’S GO

[Read: Google wants to move UK users’ data to the US — here’s what you need to know]

Developers can find this new section through Developer tools > More tools > Rendering > Emulate visual deficiencies, and see how their website looks for people with different impairments. Then they can make the change to the code to render the site correctly for people with these deficiencies.

In 2018, Mozilla introduced the accessibility inspector tool in the developer version Firefox 61, to let devs test their site for accessibility. Last year, it added new tools such as contrast checker and color vision deficiency simulator to Firefox 70.

Last November, Accessibe.com, a company that provides tools to make websites more accessible, published a study that said more than 98% of 10 million webpages it studied failed to comply with Wide Web Consortium’s Web Content Accessibility Guidelines. 

While Chrome’s new tool is not a solution to every accessibility problem faced by websites, it’s a step in the right direction.

Read next: Language analysis reveals how new offenders get involved in dark web pedophile communities

Corona coverage

Read our daily coverage on how the tech industry is responding to the coronavirus and subscribe to our weekly newsletter Coronavirus in Context.

For tips and tricks on working remotely, check out our Growth Quarters articles here or follow us on Twitter.