Accessibility
On this website, it is possible to change the contrast of the content to make reading easier.
To enlarge the content, we recommend using the built-in functionality of the web browser: hold down the Ctrl key (Cmd key in OS X) and press the + or – key at the same time.
Another convenient option is to use the mouse: hold down the Ctrl key while moving the mouse scroll wheel. You can return to normal size by pressing the Ctrl and 0 keys at the same time.
All major operating systems include settings to increase the content displayed on the screen.
In Windows 7, you can find a program called Magnifier if you click on the “Start” menu button at the bottom left, type Magnifier (the first few letters are enough) and press Enter. A small window will open in which everything is magnified. By default, the program tracks the position of the mouse cursor. In Windows XP, you can find Magnifier by going to Start > All Programs > Accessories > Accessibility > Magnifier.
On Apple computers, to use zoom, navigate to: Apple menu > System Preferences > Accessibility (or Universal Access) > Zoom.
Mykola Samar has collaborated with the e-Governance Academy since 2015. Now he is an Senior Expert on e-services. Prior to that, he was an IT Expert on the implementation and development of the Vulyk Information System within the EGOV4UKRAINE project, with the aim of improving the quality of administrative service provision.
Before the e-Governance Academy, Mykola worked at various offices within the governmental IT sector, at both national and local levels. For five years, he had worked as an advisor to the Head of the State Agency for E-Governance of Ukraine and was also responsible for e-governance development in Ukraine and the implementation of automation systems for business processes at local and central authorities. He took part in the drafting of Ukraine’s legislation on informatisation.
Mykola has a Master’s degree in public administration from the National Academy for Public Administration under the President of Ukraine, as well as a Master’s degree in System Programming from the Khmelnytskyi National University.
Mykola speaks Ukrainian, Russian and English.