RE: Textual Images vs. Styled Text

Yes, a good example of not wanting to overlay styled text on a pixel image, 
since anyone who would need the text enlarged would need the image enlarged 
along with it...

So you need either vector graphics such as SVG or alternative enlarged 
pixel  images (useful for everyone actually).

Len

At 05:05 AM 11/30/00 -0800, William Loughborough wrote:
>At 06:54 AM 11/30/00 -0800, Anne Pemberton wrote:
>>unnoted since we were interested in the illustrations and how they are 
>>used more than the text.
>
>The imagemap of the bogies is of course a marvelous example of the 
>text/illustrations being integrated almost inseparably 
>[http://www.trainweb.org/railwaytechnical/bogie1.html].
>
>I just got a nifty little program called LiveImage 
>http://www.liveimage.com/ that you will almost certainly find useful and 
>probably indispensable. It makes image map creation trivial and the 
>program can be learned in minutes. I believe this could make your 
>preparations of school materials way less tedious.
>
>--
>Love.
>                 ACCESSIBILITY IS RIGHT - NOT PRIVILEGE
>

--
Leonard R. Kasday, Ph.D.
Institute on Disabilities/UAP and Dept. of Electrical Engineering at Temple 
University
(215) 204-2247 (voice)                 (800) 750-7428 (TTY)
http://astro.temple.edu/~kasday         mailto:kasday@acm.org

Chair, W3C Web Accessibility Initiative Evaluation and Repair Tools Group
http://www.w3.org/WAI/ER/IG/

The WAVE web page accessibility evaluation assistant: 
http://www.temple.edu/inst_disabilities/piat/wave/

Received on Thursday, 30 November 2000 10:24:12 UTC