- From: Benjamin Hawkes-Lewis <bhawkeslewis@googlemail.com>
- Date: Thu, 01 Mar 2007 11:27:49 +0000
Anne van Kesteren wrote: > Opera has some internal expiremental builds with an implementation of a > <video> element. Interesting. I just wanted to ask for a bit more detail on how this works in practice and what it can be used for. How would this support audio descriptions, captions, and subtitles? e.g. Can the captions be displayed to match user preferences for fonts and so forth and exposed to accessibility frameworks? Might it support any form of hyperfilm (e.g. clicking on something in the film like one can click on parts of a Flickr photograph, changing perspective etc) or is it intended only for traditional linear video? (These capabilities look like potential advantages of SMIL.) >From an accessibility point of view (not to mention an interoperability one), doesn't the draft spec need to mandate the inclusion of a fallback? And what do play() pause() stop() etc do when video-playing is unavailable and the fallback content is displayed instead? The draft spec shows the addition of button elements by the content producer. Would it be better from a usability and efficiency point of view (both for authors and viewers) for UAs to generate the UI themselves? (Or at least, since some interfaces might have more complex and innovative functionality, to have the UA's own UI as default, and allow a boolean attribute to disable the default generated interface? e.g. customui="customui"). -- Benjamin Hawkes-Lewis
Received on Thursday, 1 March 2007 03:27:49 UTC