Hello, I just wanted to reach out and let you know it appears the page for tables is currently broken. It is showing bullet points and code. -Beckah Moscuzza
Hello, I just wanted to reach out and let you know it appears the page for tables is currently broken. It is showing bullet points and code. -Beckah Moscuzza
Hello, I just wanted to reach out and let you know it appears the page for tables is currently broken. It is showing bullet points and code. -Beckah Moscuzza
Hello, I was looking at the accessible Carousel example<mailto:https://www.w3.org/WAI/tutorials/carousels/working-example/> and was wondering about the focus order. When a user uses one of the navigation buttons (either the arrows or the pagination), should the next focusable item be on the new content that is visible instead of the next control? Currently, when a user uses the next arrow button to go to the next slide, the next focusable item is the pagination, and then content after the carousel. The user would have to know to navigate backwards to view the new slide content. I’m thinking of the accessibility of this for screen reader users. Looking forward to hearing your response. Thank you! -- Kathy Kim, Digital Learning Build Coordinator | Digital Learning | Innovative Learning<https://humber.ca/innovativelearning/> kathy.kim@humber.ca<mailto:kathy.kim@humber.ca> Humber College Institute of Technology & Advanced Learning<https://humber.ca/> CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE: This email and attached material are intended for the use of the individual or organization to whom they are addressed and may not be distributed, copied, or disclosed to other unauthorized persons. This material may contain confidential and/or personal information subject to the provisions of the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act, the Municipal Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act, and/or the Personal Health Information Protection Act. If you receive this transmission in error, please notify me immediately and delete this message. Do not email, print, copy, distribute, or disclose this email or its contents further. Thank you for your co-operation and assistance.
Hello, I was looking at the accessible Carousel example<mailto:https://www.w3.org/WAI/tutorials/carousels/working-example/> and was wondering about the focus order. When a user uses one of the navigation buttons (either the arrows or the pagination), should the next focusable item be on the new content that is visible instead of the next control? Currently, when a user uses the next arrow button to go to the next slide, the next focusable item is the pagination, and then content after the carousel. The user would have to know to navigate backwards to view the new slide content. I’m thinking of the accessibility of this for screen reader users. Looking forward to hearing your response. Thank you! -- Kathy Kim, Digital Learning Build Coordinator | Digital Learning | Innovative Learning<https://humber.ca/innovativelearning/> kathy.kim@humber.ca<mailto:kathy.kim@humber.ca> Humber College Institute of Technology & Advanced Learning<https://humber.ca/> CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE: This email and attached material are intended for the use of the individual or organization to whom they are addressed and may not be distributed, copied, or disclosed to other unauthorized persons. This material may contain confidential and/or personal information subject to the provisions of the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act, the Municipal Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act, and/or the Personal Health Information Protection Act. If you receive this transmission in error, please notify me immediately and delete this message. Do not email, print, copy, distribute, or disclose this email or its contents further. Thank you for your co-operation and assistance.
Hello, I was looking at the accessible Carousel example<mailto:https://www.w3.org/WAI/tutorials/carousels/working-example/> and was wondering about the focus order. When a user uses one of the navigation buttons (either the arrows or the pagination), should the next focusable item be on the new content that is visible instead of the next control? Currently, when a user uses the next arrow button to go to the next slide, the next focusable item is the pagination, and then content after the carousel. The user would have to know to navigate backwards to view the new slide content. I’m thinking of the accessibility of this for screen reader users. Looking forward to hearing your response. Thank you! -- Kathy Kim, Digital Learning Build Coordinator | Digital Learning | Innovative Learning<https://humber.ca/innovativelearning/> kathy.kim@humber.ca<mailto:kathy.kim@humber.ca> Humber College Institute of Technology & Advanced Learning<https://humber.ca/> CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE: This email and attached material are intended for the use of the individual or organization to whom they are addressed and may not be distributed, copied, or disclosed to other unauthorized persons. This material may contain confidential and/or personal information subject to the provisions of the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act, the Municipal Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act, and/or the Personal Health Information Protection Act. If you receive this transmission in error, please notify me immediately and delete this message. Do not email, print, copy, distribute, or disclose this email or its contents further. Thank you for your co-operation and assistance.
Hi Brian, Thanks for your email. Can you outline what page you are seeing this on? It's unclear from your email. Thanks, Brian Brian Elton Practice Manager, Training W3C Advisory Committee Representative W3C Accessibility Education and Outreach Working Group (EOWG) Co-chair [Join us at CSUN 2024, Vispero Booth #503, March 18 -22; Anaheim, CA. Make every interaction inclusive and Usable. Check out our accessibility talks.]<https://www.tpgi.com/csun-2024-at-conference-tpgi-sessions/> [Tpgi] TPG Interactive https://www.tpgi.com A Vispero Company https://vispero.com<https://vispero.com/> -- This message is intended to be confidential and may be legally privileged. It is intended solely for the addressee. If you are not the intended recipient, please delete this message from your system and notify us immediately. Any disclosure, copying, distribution or action taken or omitted to be taken by an unintended recipient in reliance on this message is prohibited and may be unlawful. ________________________________ From: Balk, Brian J (DHS) <brian.balk@state.mn.us> Sent: February 21, 2024 11:43 AM To: wai-eo-editors@w3.org <wai-eo-editors@w3.org> Subject: [en] Complex Images You don't often get email from brian.balk@state.mn.us. Learn why this is important<https://aka.ms/LearnAboutSenderIdentification> CAUTION:EXTERNAL EMAIL SENDER! I think that your sample bar graph on this page does not have sufficient color contrast on the bars. I know it’s not the main idea, but it still is important as part of the illustration. Caution: This e-mail and attached documents, if any, may contain information that is protected by state or federal law. E-mail containing private or protected information should not be sent over a public (nonsecure) Internet unless it is encrypted pursuant to DHS standards. This e-mail should be forwarded only on a strictly need-to-know basis. If you are not the intended recipient, please: (1) notify the sender immediately, (2) do not forward the message, (3) do not print the message and (4) erase the message from your system.
Hi Brian, Thanks for your email. Can you outline what page you are seeing this on? It's unclear from your email. Thanks, Brian Brian Elton Practice Manager, Training W3C Advisory Committee Representative W3C Accessibility Education and Outreach Working Group (EOWG) Co-chair [Join us at CSUN 2024, Vispero Booth #503, March 18 -22; Anaheim, CA. Make every interaction inclusive and Usable. Check out our accessibility talks.]<https://www.tpgi.com/csun-2024-at-conference-tpgi-sessions/> [Tpgi] TPG Interactive https://www.tpgi.com A Vispero Company https://vispero.com<https://vispero.com/> -- This message is intended to be confidential and may be legally privileged. It is intended solely for the addressee. If you are not the intended recipient, please delete this message from your system and notify us immediately. Any disclosure, copying, distribution or action taken or omitted to be taken by an unintended recipient in reliance on this message is prohibited and may be unlawful. ________________________________ From: Balk, Brian J (DHS) <brian.balk@state.mn.us> Sent: February 21, 2024 11:43 AM To: wai-eo-editors@w3.org <wai-eo-editors@w3.org> Subject: [en] Complex Images You don't often get email from brian.balk@state.mn.us. Learn why this is important<https://aka.ms/LearnAboutSenderIdentification> CAUTION:EXTERNAL EMAIL SENDER! I think that your sample bar graph on this page does not have sufficient color contrast on the bars. I know it’s not the main idea, but it still is important as part of the illustration. Caution: This e-mail and attached documents, if any, may contain information that is protected by state or federal law. E-mail containing private or protected information should not be sent over a public (nonsecure) Internet unless it is encrypted pursuant to DHS standards. This e-mail should be forwarded only on a strictly need-to-know basis. If you are not the intended recipient, please: (1) notify the sender immediately, (2) do not forward the message, (3) do not print the message and (4) erase the message from your system.
Hello, Please see the link below to the Google doc where I put my notes for this project. https://docs.google.com/document/d/1DxaPa2WjQUwGJ6aXJ5j3be_KuppicPcZ9PVx4h-gTQE/edit?usp=sharing Best Regards, Peter Cederberg
Hello, Please see the attached link to my notes on Easy Checks. https://docs.google.com/document/d/1oNsfatudNanf23vsJ3faS-Hzl6HQCK3sohx2kN7KO3U/edit?usp=sharing Best Regards, Peter Cederberg
I think that your sample bar graph on this page does not have sufficient color contrast on the bars. I know it's not the main idea, but it still is important as part of the illustration. Caution: This e-mail and attached documents, if any, may contain information that is protected by state or federal law. E-mail containing private or protected information should not be sent over a public (nonsecure) Internet unless it is encrypted pursuant to DHS standards. This e-mail should be forwarded only on a strictly need-to-know basis. If you are not the intended recipient, please: (1) notify the sender immediately, (2) do not forward the message, (3) do not print the message and (4) erase the message from your system.