- From: Kynn Bartlett <kynn-hwg@idyllmtn.com>
- Date: Mon, 07 Dec 1998 19:19:55 -0800
- To: Chris Kreussling <CHRIS.KREUSSLING@ny.frb.org>
- Cc: w3c-wai-ig@w3.org
At 01:07 p.m. 12/07/98 -0500, Chris Kreussling wrote: >Is the casual or beginning web author interested in learning >even HTML? Well, often they are. >Probably not; they just want to "put up a Web page." They're going >to use a visual authoring tool. These are the people for whom >Authoring Tools must *enforce* universal design. Yes, but tools are not necessarily going to solve every problem. And today's tools just won't cut it. I hope you're not suggesting that the answer for newbie web authors (such as, say, those working on sites for government agency departments) is "oh, wait a year or so, and hopefully someone will have made a better tool for you"? In my experience, the newbies care about accessibility just as much as the seasoned veterans (which is to say, most don't think about it, but when they find out, they're usually very interested); saying that there's no good solution for them at this time seems to be conceding a battle that we should be able to win. -- Kynn Bartlett <kynn@idyllmtn.com> http://www.idyllmtn.com/~kynn/ Chief Technologist & Co-Owner, Idyll Mountain Internet; Fullerton, California Enroll now for web accessibility with HTML 4.0! http://www.hwg.org/classes/ The voice of the future? http://www.hwg.org/opcenter/w3c/voicebrowsers.html
Received on Monday, 7 December 1998 22:24:05 UTC