- From: Daniel Weck <daniel.weck@gmail.com>
- Date: Fri, 4 Feb 2011 11:11:12 +0000
- To: "www-style@w3.org list" <www-style@w3.org>
Please feel free to contribute to this list: ** Opera implements some of CSS3-Speech (and non-deprecated CSS2.1 Aural Stylesheets features): http://www.opera.com/docs/specs/presto25/css/properties/ Note that at this time of writing, the latest Opera engine is Presto 2.7, but the documentation lists speech properties up to 2.5. More information about shipping Opera products here: http://www.opera.com/docs/specs/productspecs/ ** EmacSpeak implements CSS Aural Stylesheets: http://emacspeak.sourceforge.net ** WebKit implements support for the "speak" property in its core, and I think that there is platform-level support through the accessibility layer (Mac OS X only ?): http://trac.webkit.org/browser/trunk/LayoutTests/platform/mac/accessibility/css-speech-speak.html https://bugs.webkit.org/show_bug.cgi?id=46827 ** FormsPlayer (now "ubiquity-xforms", included in "backplanebx") for Internet Explorer, provides prosody control via CSS properties (voice, volume, rate, pitch): http://www.google.com/codesearch?q=speak+package:http://ubiquity-xforms-cpp \.googlecode\.com http://code.google.com/p/backplanebx/source/browse/XFormsProcessor/content/XFormsProcessor/chrome/ ** FireVox implements some CSS Speech features (has its own CSS parser, because Firefox doesn't support CSS Speech/Aural features): http://www.firevox.clcworld.net/demos/css_demo.html ** Mozilla status: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=525444 https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=47159
Received on Friday, 4 February 2011 11:11:47 UTC