- From: David MacDonald <david100@sympatico.ca>
- Date: Thu, 30 Jun 2016 12:44:21 -0400
- To: Alastair Campbell <acampbell@nomensa.com>
- CC: WCAG <w3c-wai-gl@w3.org>, "public-mobile-a11y-tf@w3.org" <public-mobile-a11y-tf@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <BLU436-SMTP500BCC742E818A8086FD40FE240@phx.gbl>
>>In a responsive site you would not get a link to a ‘desktop’ version. I think this is very common. I have seen and evaluated many mobile sites with a link at the bottom of the page that says "Desktop version" and it just serves up the same URL, without the breakpoint for mobile. >>>In my mind this is already covered by the concept of accessibility supported, as small/touch screen devices are common, therefore should be included. I wish I could agree with you... this is what I want, I want it to be already covered. I don't believe it is. I have an action item to ask other old timers to WCAG their opinions. But here is my thinking. If the page has just ONE, WCAG conforming view, then it passed WCAG. Someone can claim conformance to WCAG and in their internal conformance statement say "accessibility supported for us means JAWS and IE, and a 22" desktop monitor". This stack meets the accessibility support requirements of WCAG. But they have met any law or judge that requires this site meet WCAG. Cheers, David MacDonald *Can**Adapt* *Solutions Inc.* Tel: 613.235.4902 LinkedIn <http://www.linkedin.com/in/davidmacdonald100> twitter.com/davidmacd GitHub <https://github.com/DavidMacDonald> www.Can-Adapt.com <http://www.can-adapt.com/> * Adapting the web to all users* * Including those with disabilities* If you are not the intended recipient, please review our privacy policy <http://www.davidmacd.com/disclaimer.html> On Thu, Jun 30, 2016 at 12:18 PM, Alastair Campbell <acampbell@nomensa.com> wrote: > I wrote: > > >>If you provide *one website* with *multiple breakpoints*, it has to meet > WCAG 2.0/2.1 at *all breakpoints*. If you swap in a different menu at a > different screensize, each ‘version’ has to meet WCAG. > > > > David replied: > > > This is what the entire 75 email thread to the list has been about for > me, summed up in one sentence. > > > > Ok, well let’s not confuse the issue with talking about alternate versions > then! > > > > In a responsive site you would not get a link to a ‘desktop’ version. If > there is a link, it is an alternative version, and a different kettle of > fish. > > > > In my mind this is already covered by the concept of accessibility > supported, as small/touch screen devices are common, therefore should be > included. > > > > -Alastair > > > > > > >
Received on Thursday, 30 June 2016 16:44:56 UTC