- From: T.V Raman <raman@google.com>
- Date: Thu, 4 Feb 2010 11:18:25 -0800
- To: brucel@opera.com
- Cc: raman@google.com, mjs@apple.com, schwer@us.ibm.com, ian@hixie.ch, jonas@sicking.cc, public-html@w3.org
it's a given that they wont be aligned, and worse, the user wont even know that they aren't. People will just need to hire more consultants to verify that they are aligned, and more lawyers on the other end to prove that they are not;-) Bruce Lawson writes: > On Thu, 04 Feb 2010 18:30:29 -0000, T.V Raman <raman@google.com> wrote: > > > > > The biggest challenge with the <accessibility> element as > > proposed is how one is going to ensure that it's true to and > > synchronized with what is actually drawn by the canvas element. > > ay, there's the rub. Will web designers - the overwhelming majority of > whom are sighted and most, like me, have little or no real knowledge of > assistive technologies,if they can afford them for testing - be able to > keep these aligned? > > It would be nice to think so. But I have my doubts. > > bruce
Received on Thursday, 4 February 2010 19:19:21 UTC