- From: Janina Sajka <janina@rednote.net>
- Date: Mon, 8 Jul 2019 13:05:28 -0400
- To: Joshue O Connor <joconnor@w3.org>
- Cc: "White, Jason J" <jjwhite@ets.org>, W3C WAI Accessible Platform Architectures <public-apa@w3.org>, "public-rqtf@w3.org" <public-rqtf@w3.org>
Thanks both to Josh and Jason.For now let me say that I agree this is important. One possibly good example is where the vehicle can only get relatively close to a destination, but not up to the door. An example from my own personal life is my experience of a certain Sunday in Milan. I wanted to visit the Cathedral for services. My taxi was only able to get me to the plaza fronting the cathedral. That was over 100 meters away, and my first attempt put me in the shopping arcade adjacent. Not sure how to write this up, but I'll work it up and forward on list later today. Best, Janina Joshue O Connor writes: > On 03/07/2019 21:17, White, Jason J wrote: > > > Responding to Janina's early draft: > > [...] > > > > The accessibility of in-vehicle information systems may also be out of scope, but it is important nonetheless. > > Looks good Janina- I don't think I've anything substantive to add at this > point, just +1 to Jason's point here about in-car information systems. There > may be a use case for multi modal routing of some aspects of the information > system. Say where a blind user can help with navigation by having specific > system information routed to their device that could help with collaborative > navigation or sharing of various information - if one wished to do such a > thing. > > That's about all I've got on initial review, thanks. > > Josh > > -- > Emerging Web Technology Specialist/A11y (WAI/W3C) -- Janina Sajka Linux Foundation Fellow Executive Chair, Accessibility Workgroup: http://a11y.org The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI) Chair, Accessible Platform Architectures http://www.w3.org/wai/apa
Received on Monday, 8 July 2019 17:05:59 UTC