- From: Velleman, Eric <evelleman@bartimeus.nl>
- Date: Thu, 1 Dec 2011 09:40:48 +0000
- To: Martijn Houtepen <m.houtepen@accessibility.nl>, Alistair Garrison<alistair.j.garrison@gmail.com>, Eval TF <public-wai-evaltf@w3.org>, KerstinProbiesch <k.probiesch@googlemail.com>
Yes! But is a game/complete process always part of the scope if it is on a website? Can we include or exclude parts? Kindest regards, Eric ________________________________________ Van: Martijn Houtepen [m.houtepen@accessibility.nl] Verzonden: woensdag 30 november 2011 10:01 Aan: Alistair Garrison; Eval TF; Kerstin Probiesch Onderwerp: RE: Finding complete processes Hi All, I agree. I think a predefined way of navigating, leading to a goal of some kind (a download for example) could be regarded a 'complete process' as well. In the case of point-and-click adventure games, the whole game will be a 'complete process'. Best regards, Martijn -----Oorspronkelijk bericht----- Van: Alistair Garrison [mailto:alistair.j.garrison@gmail.com] Verzonden: woensdag 30 november 2011 9:36 Aan: Eval TF; Kerstin Probiesch Onderwerp: Re: Finding complete processes Hi All, Just adding to my previous mail. The simplest way to find complete processes might be to search (scan) the site for forms (excluding those in every page i.e. search)... Saying that, search (and other 'on every page' forms) probably should be included once as a complete process. Again, all the best Alistair
Received on Thursday, 1 December 2011 09:42:37 UTC