WebAIM - Web Accessibility In Mind

E-mail List Archives

Re: WebAIM-Forum Digest, Vol 72, Issue 3

for

From: Richard R. Hill
Date: Mar 3, 2011 3:03PM


Elizabeth,

The experimenatl site for autcaption is great! Except, most of the
examples unfortunately do not work across browsers (or at all).

­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­
Rick


-----Original Message-----
From: ejp10 < <EMAIL REMOVED> >
Reply-To: WebAIM Discussion List < <EMAIL REMOVED> >
Date: Thu, 3 Mar 2011 11:24:50 -0800
To: " <EMAIL REMOVED> " < <EMAIL REMOVED> >
Subject: Re: [WebAIM] WebAIM-Forum Digest, Vol 72, Issue 3

This has been an interesting discussion.

For what it's worth, I think the SUMMARY attribute should be visible to
sighted users just as the CAPTION and TH tags (via formatting) are. In my
opinion, not only would sighted users benefit from the information, but it
would make it more concrete to sighted Web developers.

It looks like you can modify the CSS to make SUMMARY visible, and I may
experiment with that (don't want to disable it in JAWS)
http://www.markschenk.com/cssexp/autocaption/autocaption.html

E. Pyatt

On Mar 3, 2011, at 2:00 PM, <EMAIL REMOVED> wrote:

> The fact is (IMO of course), that what @summary did/does for blind users
> it actually does very well. The fact that it didn't do it for _all_
> users, was its death knell. Which to me, is a pity. While philosophies
> like Universal Design are great, I would rather see elements and
> attributes that support some user groups very well, than elements and
> attributes that serve all users poorly.

=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-Elizabeth J. Pyatt, Ph.D.
Instructional Designer