- From: David Poehlman <poehlman1@home.com>
- Date: Thu, 22 Nov 2001 06:06:17 -0500
- To: "Charles McCathieNevile" <charles@w3.org>, "Jim Thatcher" <jim@jimthatcher.com>
- Cc: "WAI IG" <w3c-wai-ig@w3.org>
I'm getting to the point where I feel it might be necessary for best practice and position that user agent developpers develop their own access solutions rather than relying on third parties to do it. It seems that some third party vendors will play favorites for any number of possible reasons. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Charles McCathieNevile" <charles@w3.org> To: "Jim Thatcher" <jim@jimthatcher.com> Cc: "WAI IG" <w3c-wai-ig@w3.org> Sent: Thursday, November 22, 2001 1:46 AM Subject: RE: abbr/acronym - repetitive use I am told Mozilla also does this. Although for the last few years many screen reader makers have worked closely with IE, there is now a major project to ensure good compatibility between a number of screen readers (and other assistive technologies) and Mozilla, and work has also been done for other browsers. Chaals On Thu, 22 Nov 2001, Charles McCathieNevile wrote: I use iCab from day to day which renders the things which are abbr and acronym elements (It is true that browsers based on IE suffer from the fact that IE never implemented abbr as far as I know, but it has implemented acronym for some time) and when I use Amaya it gives me the ability to identify the elements, and to ask for the title attribute value. In each case, they visually identify the element (Amaya through style sheet, iCab by default). With iCab, a mouseover will cause the value of the title attribute to be displayed in the status bar, with Amaya I can query for the value with a couple of keystrokes.
Received on Thursday, 22 November 2001 06:06:17 UTC