I took a look at the Profamilia site regarding the article. Wow - someone really has no idea about accessibility. Ok, my pages are also built with tables, but I don't claim that it's really barrier-free either. At least I test my pages with Lynx to see how a screen reader might render my pages - and they're usable. You really can't say that about the Profamilia pages. Not only do they use frames (which can already be a big problem with screen readers), their frame names are also so meaningless - just take a look at the main page (i.e. the frameset) in the LynxViewer. If you click through one after another (!) on the frames bv zw start.html , unten , f_inhalt and inhalt, then you actually get some content served. Yes, four levels of nested framesets. Before that, two redirects as well. Ridiculous. At Ligne Claire there's the original article.