MSAA has not been renamed. It has been replaced with an entirely new framework called UI Automation. From what I understand, it includes a MSAA compatibility layer for exposing applications to old MSAA clients such as existing screen readers.

Documentation can be found at:

http://msdn2.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms753107.aspx

--
Benjamin Hawkes-Lewis

Richie Gardenhire wrote:
Windows Vista borrowed a couple of Apple's concepts, but they didn't expand on them. MSAA is no longer called Microsoft Active Accessibility. It's called something else, and from what I understand, it allows flexibility for screenreaders to be developed to take advantage of Vista's full range of accessibility features without reinventing the wheel. Richie Gardenhire, Anchorage, Alaska.



Reply via email to