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Re: Learning capturing technology

for

From: Sean Murphy
Date: May 17, 2016 2:50AM


Jennifer



Your wonderful and thanks for spending the time to pull the resources together. No wonder I was not getting the right information. Captioning was what I was referring too.

Sean
> On 17 May 2016, at 7:22 AM, Jennifer Sutton < <EMAIL REMOVED> > wrote:
>
> Note to all:
>
> I've included a range of resources in here; those of you already familiar with this area might be less aware of the comparisons I've included and could find those valuable.
>
>
> Sean, I selected resources to offer you a range of the sites with information; in other words, there's often a lot more on each site than the link I've provided. My point is to "help you learn to fish" for yourself.
>
>
>
> I hope many besides Sean will find this response valuable; it took a fair bit of time to pull together.
>
> Sean,
>
> I'll leave your message partially in tact and try to give you a starting point for most of the questions.
>
>
> It's not capturing, though; I believe you're talking about captioning. That is unless you're talking about capturing content, such as via screen casts.
>
> I'll assume you mean captioning.
>
>
> WebAIM, itself, is always a good place to start:
>
> http://webaim.org/techniques/captions/
>
>
> Additional responses inline, beginning with JS
>
>
> Generally, however, I'd encourage you to take a good look around the 3Play Media site. While that company is a vendor, they do a commendable job of offering free seminars and quite a bit of free content to help folks get started.
>
> Here's a fairly randomly chosen place to start:
>
> http://www.3playmedia.com/2014/01/10/future-accessibility-video-captions-according-google-youtube/
>
>
>
> <snip>
>
>
> 1. Site that lists players that support close capturing?
> JS: Try this:
> http://www.webaxe.org/accessible-html5-media-players-and-more/
>
> Here are three comparisons:
> http://praegnanz.de/html5video/
>
> https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1QJVcXx5hTWYBcJbHJD3DrL3hSFVbfy1VQFyADMtrDFY/edit?pli=1#gid=0
>
> and
>
> http://kensgists.github.io/apt/
>
>> 2. The standards surrounding close capturing??
>
> JS: Well, WCAG 2.0 has guidelines about closed captioning. But if you want more, I imagine this might help. But some of what'd be involved will be dependent upon the platform.
>
> The WCAG references are easy enough to find, so here's a link to another WAI project that may be less known to some on the list:
> http://www.w3.org/TR/media-accessibility-reqs/
>
> Here's a generally helpful collection of information:
> http://www.iheni.com/accessible-media-player-resources/
>
> Note, too, the BBC's guidelines..
> They are here:
> http://bbc.github.io/subtitle-guidelines/
>
>>
>> 3. Tools used to create close capturing?
>
> JS: I'll leave this to others. There are a lot of dependencies here, i.e. what platform you're using to create and what platform you'll be using to post.
>
>> 4. Resources that explain the close capturing Technologies.
>
> JS: This question is a bit vague for me to try to spend time guessing. Again, there are platform dependencies, browser dependencies, Flash, HTML5, mobile or not, etc. Once you learn more, maybe you can come back to the list and be more specific.
>
>
>> 5. Which tools are accessible to screen readers, low vision, etc.
>
> JS: Perhaps a better place for this question would be on the BATS list; maybe you could gather info from there, put together an article for that site, and post the link to it back here.
>
>
>> Finally, here are a few other items that may help, generally:
>
> http://www.dcmp.org/descriptionkey/
>
> http://www.uiaccess.com/transcripts/transcripts_on_the_web.html
>
>> http://www.accessibilityoz.com/factsheets/video/video-factsheet/
>
> http://main.wgbh.org/wgbh/pages/mag/services/captioning/faq/
>
> Best,
> Jennifer
> > > >