- From: George Kerscher <kerscher@montana.com>
- Date: Thu, 6 Dec 2018 15:57:57 -0700
- To: "'Elsey, Teresa'" <Teresa.Elsey@hmhco.com>, "'Siegman, Tzviya'" <tsiegman@wiley.com>, "'W3C EPUB 3 Community Group'" <public-epub3@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <007d01d48db7$215a3ac0$640eb040$@montana.com>
Hi, I believe that Teresa has nailed it. What I would call the formal title page would contain the information about the title along with authors, Publisher, editions, current and past copyrights etc. The cover is different and is one of the components of an EPUB, which has not been accessible. While The Bookshelf function uses the metadata, including the thumbnail of the cover image, , we thought having the cover as the first item in the content would resolve this problem. If there is a meaningful image, that would be communicated in the alt text of the image. If there is other marketing text on the cover, IMO I would put that outside the alt text, because everybody would probably want to read that. Oh, and a thumnail on a small device, like a phone, might be really hard to read for anybody. Best George From: Elsey, Teresa <Teresa.Elsey@hmhco.com> Sent: Thursday, December 6, 2018 2:00 PM To: Siegman, Tzviya <tsiegman@wiley.com>; George Kerscher <kerscher@montana.com>; 'W3C EPUB 3 Community Group' <public-epub3@w3.org> Subject: Re: New fundamental test book and covers My ebook group does not generally include the cover image in the book content, so George’s point that doing so is the only way to make alt text for the cover available is I think a good one to underscore. (We do include a title page, which generally has the same information – title and author.) Teresa ———————————— Teresa Elsey Senior Managing Editor Houghton Mifflin Harcourt 125 High Street Boston, MA 02110 617-351-3888 From: "Siegman, Tzviya" <tsiegman@wiley.com <mailto:tsiegman@wiley.com> > Date: Thursday, December 6, 2018 at 2:40 PM To: George Kerscher <kerscher@montana.com <mailto:kerscher@montana.com> >, 'W3C EPUB 3 Community Group' <public-epub3@w3.org <mailto:public-epub3@w3.org> > Subject: RE: New fundamental test book and covers Resent-From: <public-epub3@w3.org <mailto:public-epub3@w3.org> > Resent-Date: Thursday, December 6, 2018 at 2:39 PM This message originated from outside your organization _____ Thanks for clarifying, George. I think it’s a good idea to work on best practices for including author and title in the alt for cover. Tzviya Siegman Information Standards Lead Wiley 201-748-6884 <mailto:tsiegman@wiley.com> tsiegman@wiley.com From: George Kerscher <kerscher@montana.com <mailto:kerscher@montana.com> > Sent: Thursday, December 6, 2018 2:28 PM To: Siegman, Tzviya <tsiegman@wiley.com <mailto:tsiegman@wiley.com> >; 'W3C EPUB 3 Community Group' <public-epub3@w3.org <mailto:public-epub3@w3.org> > Subject: RE: New fundamental test book and covers Hi, I think that most RS use the metadata to present the title in their bookshelf. Because there is no alt text in our metadata to present , we are suggesting that the cover be the first item in the book content. Here, because it is HTML, we have the alt attribute available to present the essential information about the cover. I think it is as simple as that. If there is another way, it would be good to know. Best George From: Siegman, Tzviya <tsiegman@wiley.com <mailto:tsiegman@wiley.com> > Sent: Thursday, December 6, 2018 11:22 AM To: George Kerscher <kerscher@montana.com <mailto:kerscher@montana.com> >; W3C EPUB 3 Community Group <public-epub3@w3.org <mailto:public-epub3@w3.org> > Subject: RE: New fundamental test book and covers Hi George, I think I might not be fully understanding what you’re proposing. It seems to me that there are two possible solutions to users being unable to access author and title information from the bookshelf view. The first is to call upon the Reading Systems to expose the existing metadata to all users. The second is to establish best practices for authoring image descriptions for cover images to include the author and title and call upon reading systems to expose that users. I am not sure that I understood what you meant about including the information in the first page of the book. How would a user be able to access the information from the bookshelf? Would you mind explaining the process that you are envisioning a bit more? Thanks, Tzviya Tzviya Siegman Information Standards Lead Wiley 201-748-6884 <mailto:tsiegman@wiley.com> tsiegman@wiley.com From: George Kerscher <kerscher@montana.com <mailto:kerscher@montana.com> > Sent: Thursday, December 6, 2018 12:01 PM To: W3C EPUB 3 Community Group <public-epub3@w3.org <mailto:public-epub3@w3.org> > Subject: New fundamental test book and covers Hi, With EPUB 3, the metadata for a cover includes an image title and author. A blind person would not be able to get information about the cover in the Reading Systems bookshelf. In our fundamental test book, we have included as the first page information about the cover image. I have attached it here, and it is in the draft version of this title at: http://dl.daisy.org/epub30-test-0300-20181129.epub We are fairly confident that any Reading System would not have a problem with this approach. Is this something to consider as a best practice? Best George George Kerscher Ph.D. -In our Information Age, access to information is a fundamental human right. Chief Innovations Officer, DAISY Consortium http://www.daisy.org Senior Advisor, Global Literacy, Benetech http://www.benetech.org President, International Digital Publishing Forum (IDPF) http://www.idpf.org Member of the National Museum and Library Services Board (IMLS) http://www.imls.gov Chair Steering Council Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI), a division of the W3C http://www.w3c.org/wai Phone: +1 406/549-4687 Cell:+1 406/544-2466 Email: kerscher@montana.com <mailto:kerscher@montana.com>
Received on Thursday, 6 December 2018 22:58:27 UTC