Do you know what's not accessible? Writing "a11y" in any article or documentation

I will accept it as a convenience in APIs since developers are lazy and can't spell, but fuck off with using it in text

@jonathanhogg I wonder what the origin story is?
It feels like something someone wrote in a conference talk to crack a gag about making something over-trendy and unintentionally inaccessible.
And people used it as a joke to each other so much that the funny wore off and it accidentally got adopted.

@jtruk @jonathanhogg the general form (a11y, i18n, k8s) has been around a while now.

I think i18n came first, probably because it was easier than repeatedly having the "internationalisation vs internationalization" spelling debate...

But I have seen it said that "k8s" was first because no one could remember how to spell (or pronounce) kubernetes?

Either way, I absolutely hate that this has just become how the tech industry abbreviates things.

It feels like it's on the "smug" side of clever

@lpbkdotnet @jtruk Wikipedia believes that i18n was coined in the 70s and is DEC's fault. Since humans read word-at-a-time by shape, I consider them all to be instances of "I am too lazy to type and therefore you will have to work harder to read"
@jonathanhogg @lpbkdotnet None of this excludes 'a11y' being a joke that got out of hand. I think that's a pretty strong candidate here!