- From: Charles 'chaals' (McCathie) Nevile <chaals@yandex.ru>
- Date: Thu, 12 Sep 2019 22:57:27 +0200
- To: w3c-wai-ig@w3.org
Yeah, when I worked on the original Authoring Tool Accessibility Guidelines in W3C two decades ago we basically covered anything that people used to create or manipulate content for putting on the web. I don't think anything has happened that would suggest that should change. So stuff that is used for commenting, uploading User-Generated Content and the like is definitely in there, even if it is mostly a feature of a website. (Turns out that a large part of what applies is the same requirements as for interactive websites, but there are a few extra things that are really important, and a few common things that are extra-important in the contexts of authoring environments. (A video editing suite and a rich text editor are pretty different. Which is why covering "authoring tools" is actually a hard - and therefore really interesting - challenge technically). cheers On Thu, 12 Sep 2019 21:19:41 +0200, Jonathan Avila <jon.avila@levelaccess.com> wrote: > From a 508 perspective authored content is anything sharable with > another person including creation of video content. I take this to > include forum posts, editors, wiki's, site creation tools, software that > exports video, whiteboards, and tools that create documents, etc. -- Using Opera's mail client: http://www.opera.com/mail/
Received on Thursday, 12 September 2019 20:57:56 UTC