Hi Steve,

The strategy we will be putting into production for GPII autopersonalization of 
web applications involves a browser extension we've been developing based on UI 
Options called UI Options Plus. Right now it is being developed for Chrome, but 
we will develop versions for the other major browsers too.

It provides a variety of familiar as well as new-developed web personalization 
enactors such as: 

* Text size
* Line spacing
* Text to speech read and highlight and select-to-read
* Customized text highlighting
* Colour and contrast themes
* Simplification
* Larger or emphasized links and controls
* Character and word spacing
* Syllabification
* Dictionary
* Table of context

Since it's a browser extension, all these adaptations can be done without 
modifying the site in question (if it is well-coded). For websites that provide 
their own auto-adapatibility features, the browser extension will (as we 
prototyped in Cloud4All) also provide a JavaScript API connected to the 
locally-installed GPII Flow Manager, enabling sites to request access to 
settings derived from a user's preference set.

Those are the two best ways for web applications to participate in the GPII 
personalization ecosystem as far as I know.

Hope this helps,

Colin

> On Oct 27, 2017, at 2:41 AM, Steve Lee <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> What is the latest on using the APfP in a web site? A few people here
> in the P4A meeting have asked.
> 
> Is there a method built into the Architecture?
> 
> Gottfried and Lucas mentioned OpenAPE which they developed in P4A. Is
> that the way to go?
> 
> http://openape.gpii.eu/
> 
> Steve Lee
> OpenDirective http://opendirective.com
> _______________________________________________
> Architecture mailing list
> [email protected]
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