- From: Jon Gunderson <jongund@staff.uiuc.edu>
- Date: Wed, 11 Nov 1998 09:22:31 -0600
- To: dd@w3.org, "Charles (Chuck) Oppermann" <chuckop@MICROSOFT.com>
- Cc: po@trace.wisc.edu, "GL - WAI Guidelines WG (E-mail)" <w3c-wai-gl@w3.org>, "cg WAI Coordination Group (E-mail)" <w3c-wai-cg@w3.org>
We are using the term document in the UA guidelines. So maybe something like. WWW Document Universal Design Guidelines The guidelines maybe should be called "Universal" since they also promote the exclusive use of W3C standards and authoring practices that related to the orginal intended purpose of elements. Jon At 12:21 PM 11/11/98 +0100, Daniel Dardailler wrote: > >> I prefer: >> "HTML and CSS Accessible Design Guidelines" >> "HTML and CSS Guidelines for Accessible Design" >> "HTML and CSS Universal Design Guidelines" >> "HTML and CSS Accessible Authoring Guidelines" (weak) >> >> You get my drift. > >Although it's mostly about HTML&CSS today, we will update it to >include more SMIL, XML, XSL, MathML, SVG, etc. in the future, so the >question is do we want to have to change a name that we are going to >promote as some kind of brand name in the upcoming year. > >I agree Page is a vague term and I'll also add Author is ambiguous, as >it refers to different roles: the designer, the user of a wysiwyg >tool, the html-by-hand author, and maybe other. > >These guidelines are really about what *is* in the Web pages, so I >propose: > > Web Content Accessible Guidelines. > Jon Gunderson, Ph.D., ATP Coordinator of Assistive Communication and Information Technology Division of Rehabilitation - Education Services University of Illinois at Urbana/Champaign 1207 S. Oak Street Champaign, IL 61820 Voice: 217-244-5870 Fax: 217-333-0248 E-mail: jongund@uiuc.edu WWW: http://www.staff.uiuc.edu/~jongund http://www.als.uiuc.edu/InfoTechAccess
Received on Wednesday, 11 November 1998 10:24:57 UTC