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Re: Testing a flash movie
From: Rebecca Ballard
Date: Nov 16, 2006 1:40PM
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I think the very fact that you said there's no keyboard access says straight
away that the app is not accessible <grin>
Rebecca
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-----Original Message-----
From: <EMAIL REMOVED>
[mailto: <EMAIL REMOVED> ] On Behalf Of ben morrison
Sent: 14 November 2006 09:49
To: WebAIM Discussion List
Subject: Re: [WebAIM] Testing a flash movie
On 11/14/06, Bob Regan < <EMAIL REMOVED> > wrote:
> Asking whether a Flash movie is accessible is more akin to asking if a
> desktop software application is accessible. It depends on how complex
> the application is and what it is doing. Take a relatively simple
> application used to display video that contains a simple play and
> pause button. Here I will ask:
>
> * Are captions for the audio displayed?
> * Does the audio play on load and thus interfere with the screen reader?
>
> * Is the button labeled for a screen reader?
> * Is the change in the button's function (play v. pause) reflected as
> the user interacts with the app?
>
> You can find a whitepaper on creating accessible Flash at:
>
> http://www.adobe.com/resources/accessibility/best_practices/best_pract
> ic
> es_acc_flash.pdf
>
> This should give you a head start. Obviously, as the application gets
> more complex, so does the evaluation of its accessibility.
>
> Measuring accessibility of the Flash app is more than turning off the
> Flash object to be sure, especially if you are assuming that the end
> user will actually interact with the Flash object itself.
>
> Feel free to send additional questions
I am not developing the flash application, it already exists, I was asked to
see how accessible it is. I couldn't find much information available on the
net for testing accessiblity of flash. I tried keyboard navigation, which
didnt work very well and I ended up downloading a Windows Eyes Demo - the
application I was testing had no information at all for the screen reader.
ben
--
Ben Morrison
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