Are gateway pages the answer to PDF shock?
Posted in Accessibility, Uncategorized, Usability, Usability Tips on March 21st, 2011 by Jo Squire – 4 CommentsPDF’s in general should be avoided as they cause many usability problems. However there are times when PDF’s have their place on the web; for instance if a document is meant to the printed then PDF is the correct medium. If your site contains PDF’s it is vital that users are aware of when a link will open a PDF.
Indicating the presence of PDF links helps to avoid PDF shock; that is giving users a nasty surprise of being dumped into a PDF file. There are a number of different ways of indicating PDF links. One method is to include a PDF gateway page; a page which summarises the PDF content, warns users that they are getting a PDF file, as well as presenting the file size. Gateway pages are supposed to prevent PDF shock as well as let users determine if the PDF is worth opening. However in our labs we often see users experience difficulty with gateway pages. Users assume the gateway page is the ‘result’ and don’t continue to click the PDF file. It is in-fact breaking the link to the real file. Many government websites use this technique and I’m starting to wonder if it really is the best way to display PDF’s.
My preference would be to include the PDF symbol next to the link along with the file size. If this is included in the link anchor text then screen readers such as JAWS can easily determine the presence of PDF’s. Surely this is enough to determine the presence of PDF’s without the need for a gateway page.
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What do you think is the best way of presenting PDF links?


Figure 1 The exponential growth of the number of transistors in computer processors (Taken from www.intel.com)
