- From: Daniel Dardailler <danield@w3.org>
- Date: Wed, 13 Jan 1999 17:23:22 +0100
- To: Jon Gunderson <jongund@staff.uiuc.edu>
- cc: "Charles (Chuck) Oppermann" <chuckop@MICROSOFT.com>, w3c-wai-ua@w3.org
> My opinion and at least in my estimate of the consensus within the working > group for the last month is that we want to reflect user requirements which > included non-visual renderings. My opinion is that by wanting to include all problems for all agents, we're not progressing much and the issues are becoming too complex (which I define as complex enough that I don't understand them by reading a message on UA without rereading all the previous thread, which I don't have time to do). I want to look at what IE/Netscape/Opera have to do so that when used alone or with an assistive technology, they are accessible. Monday I met a new student to work on some WAI tool with me here in Sophia (France). She's blind and use IE + some softbraille product. She didn't even know what lynx or webspeak were, and she's in 3rd year MS computer science.
Received on Wednesday, 13 January 1999 11:23:36 UTC