Ah, I was obviously commenting on the use of flash on the web,
rather than as a document. -Just wanted to clarify...
Smiles,
Cara :)
On Jan 13, 2008, at 3:49 PM, Cara Quinn wrote:
Actually this is something I was thinking about, and I wonder if it
isn't really more of a Safari thing than a VO thing?... It seems as
if Safari isn't making the flash content that it displays visible to
VO?... In order for links to be clickable, a browser needs to know
in some fashion, that they exist, so, in effect, once that happens,
the browser can then also make them available in some sense to be
read. Even if that is simply just to say that there's something
there...
Am I making sense?...
To a degree, it does involve the flash authors making the content
accessible in the sense of properly labeling there content, but
other than that, it still can be a function of Safari...
Anyway, am curious for thoughts on this, and obviously,any
corrections would be welcome. <smile>
Have an awesome day, All!...
Smiles,
Cara :)
On Jan 13, 2008, at 2:41 PM, Benjamin Hawkes-Lewis wrote:
Rich Caloggero wrote:
Not yet, but stay tuned. Flash is everywhere, so I'm sure Apple
has VoiceOver flash accessibility on their radar.
I doubt Apple can do much about it. Adobe, who now own Flash, need
to make use of the Apple Accessibility API, accessed by VoiceOver,
to expose Flash content and functionality to VoiceOver from the
Flash plugin the same way they expose it via the Microsoft Active
Accessibility framework to Windows screen readers.
You can request features in Adobe products from their website:
http://www.adobe.com/cfusion/mmform/index.cfm?name=wishform
--
Benjamin Hawkes-Lewis
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