For meter Attribute Issue 97 Straw Poll http://www.w3.org/2002/09/wbs/40318/issue-97-objection-poll/results Meter Element OBJECTION SUMMARY: 1. Accessibility has not been vetted. 2. Lack of implementation. 3. Lack of styling. 4. Unknown implications of meter being a form element. OBJECTION DETAILS: 1. Accessibility has not been thoroughly vetted or verified. Creating elements that are inherently accessible, that provide accessibility hooks from the get-go, with no additional work by the author could be a win for accessibility. However, the accessibility of the meter element has not been thoroughly vetted or verified. The meter element currently lacks association between action and indicator. It could be hacked with ARIA but if such hacks are needed what is the point of the element in the first place? HTML5 lacks good specification of how the meter element is to be accessible or how AT devices are to render it. It is unknown without investigation the impact this element will have on accessibility. Not considering accessibility at the design stage has been a big mistake for new HTML5 features. As we all know, considering accessibility/bolting it on after the fact is problematic not to mention time consuming (e.g. canvas and video). One of several examples [2] of the time it takes to merely get a topic on the WAI agenda: In 2008 I first requested that PFWG WAI review multimedia