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Re: WCAG 2.0 Sufficient Technique G164

for

From: catherine
Date: Nov 16, 2010 1:57PM


Hi Cliff,

Yes, this is more in line with my understanding of G164.

A helpful young man gave me Amazon 1-Click ordering as an example
off-list. Apparently, you have 30 minutes after you order an item to
cancel the order.

Anyway, thanks for all your responses. It has been very helpful.

Best regards,


Catherine

--
Catherine Roy
http://www.catherine-roy.net



On Tue, November 16, 2010 1:15 pm, Cliff Tyllick wrote:
> Extending the session is different from what this point requires.
>
> The idea is that after I've ordered something online, I should have a
> certain, stated amount of time to use some method -- not necessarily
> through the website or e-mail, but clearly stated -- to cancel that
> order.
>
> Catherine, I have to order some stuff from Amazon tonight. I'll watch for
> that and get you a screen shot *if* it appears during my order.
>
> Cliff
>
> Cliff Tyllick
> Usability assessment coordinator
> Agency Communications Division
> Texas Commission on Environmental Quality
> 512-239-4516
> <EMAIL REMOVED>
>
>>>> On 11/16/2010 at 2:18 AM, in message
>>>> <015d01cb8566$e96e7600$bc4b6200$@labscape.co.uk>, "Steve Green"
>>>> < <EMAIL REMOVED> > wrote:
> I know of two. The online business banking service from Lloyds TSB and the
> BravoSolution e-tendering system that is used by many UK public sector
> organisations such as https://bbc.bravosolution.co.uk/web/login.shtml
>
> Both display a warning when the session is due to expire, and it can be
> extended by clicking a link. One uses a CSS overlay and the other uses a
> popup window, but both require JavaScript - I don't imagine this feature
> is
> possible without it.
>
> Steve Green
> Test Partners Ltd
>
>
>
>