- From: Jan Richards <jan.richards@utoronto.ca>
- Date: Thu, 05 Mar 2009 16:12:04 -0500
- To: Markku Hakkinen <markku.hakkinen@gmail.com>
- CC: w3c-wai-ua@w3.org
I'm also percolating the issues here. Some of my thoughts: - some RIAs definitely act like UAs, but WCAG2 does already apply. - applying UAAG2 to something like my example of the Flash implemented video player seems to yield a lot of inapplicable success criteria - maybe unless we find compelling gaps in WCAG2's coverage, we should just put in a note emphasizing that "RIA/UA type applications exist and that they must meet WCAG2, in part so that the host UAs can pass accessibility information on through their DOMs and platform accessibility architectures". Cheers, Jan Markku Hakkinen wrote: > I found the conversation excellent, though at the same time somewhat > frustrating in terms of the difficulty of the problem. These thoughts > were percolating as we wound up the call: > > A user agent provides a user interaction framework for Web content. > > A user agent may be a host to other user agents, with the expectation > that the hosted UAs also conform to and do not conflict with the hosting > UA's or host platform's (OS) accessibility features. > > A user agent may be hosted by other applications that are not UAs; in > this case the UA's accessibility features must conform to and not > conflict with the hosting application and platform (OS) accessibility > features. For example, a Web browser component contained within a > desktop application used to display help information. > > Some rich internet applications, hosted by UAs, blur the line between > user agent and Web content. We might call this a hybrid RIA/UA. The > hosted RIA/UA may provide their own user interface handling but must do > so in accordance with both WCAG and UAAG. The RIA/UA must support > accessibility through integration with the host UA's DOM and/or via > direct support for the host platform's accessibility architecture. > > mark > > -- Jan Richards, M.Sc. User Interface Design Lead Adaptive Technology Resource Centre (ATRC) Faculty of Information (i-school) University of Toronto Email: jan.richards@utoronto.ca Web: http://jan.atrc.utoronto.ca Phone: 416-946-7060 Fax: 416-971-2896
Received on Thursday, 5 March 2009 21:12:57 UTC