- From: Deborah Kaplan <dkaplan@safaribooksonline.com>
- Date: Thu, 26 Mar 2015 12:23:57 -0400 (Eastern Daylight Time)
- To: Livio Mondini <l.mondini@webprofession.com>
- cc: Ivan Herman <ivan@w3.org>, Mia Lipner <mia.lipner@pearson.com>, George Kerscher <kerscher@montana.com>, Charles LaPierre <charlesl@benetech.org>, public-dpub-accessibility@w3.org
Okay, so there is a technique, and it only works in one user agent. This comes back to the same problem that Mia raised. And again, I come back to the idea that we are discussing best practices for publishers, and I think it is reasonable for us to suggest that the best practice is not to create any new content that will only work for a large number of people in a single user agent unless there is absolutely no other way to create that content and make it accessible. On Thu, 26 Mar 2015, Livio Mondini wrote: >> accessibility, as a place where I believe there is absolutely no solution >> for Flash (in that Flash is always a keyboard trap). > > http://www.w3.org/TR/WCAG20-TECHS/FLASH17.html > > >> for Flash so they can remediate their existing Flash that they don't want to >> reprogram." > > Yes, this for all sort of contents. HTML5 can be not accessible as a > Flash movie. >
Received on Thursday, 26 March 2015 16:24:30 UTC