Accessibility purists, actually. For example blind people using Lynx with a screen reader or another "alternative" user agent...
[snip]
Try that one on the judge if you get sued under the UK's Disability Discrimination Act and Special Educational Needs and Disabilities Act, or the US equivalent legislation.
At the University of Washington, all of our websites are required to be handicap-accessible, which means JavaScript must not interfere with Lynx. Some useful links about accessibility can be found here: http://www.washington.edu/computing/accessible/resources.html A company that has a free web-based accessibility test as well as add-on software for WYSIWYG HTML editors: http://www.usablenet.com/ --Chad Eberle, Database Specialist Evans School of Public Affairs @ U of WA