Hi,
Most of our blind end users seem to use Macs, but actually, I want to hide
it from all screen readers. I say most users, because this is a primarily
Mac university, with over half the campus and staff on Mac compters. So I'm
guessing that there are many VO users, though, being knew to the job, I am
not sure.

Thanks for listening,
Alex,

On Wed, Jul 30, 2008 at 5:41 PM, Alex Jurgensen` <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>wrote:

> Hi,Benjerman,
>
> I am using Css to hide certain text that clutters the page and that ony
> sighted users could use such as the fact that the web browsing mode is a
> screen reader compliant mode. I litterly have "You are browsing "ICE" in
> Screen Reader Mode" at the top. I want to add a switch to advanced or
> standard mode links for sighted users that navigate to the screen reader
> mode of my page. All this is unneccesary to the blind user, as it is a
> separate service of the university than standard and advanced mode.
> Basically, my task is to make a screen reader specific page. I mean, I don't
> have to include the extra text, but I am being kind to the sighted end
> users.
>
> Thanks for listening,
> Alex,
>
> On Wed, Jul 30, 2008 at 5:34 PM, Benjamin Hawkes-Lewis <
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> Alex Jurgensen` wrote:
>>
>>> I hope someone can help me with a coding problem. I wanto to make my site
>>> completely accessible to VO.
>>>
>>
>> Super!
>>
>>  I am on the road to doing that, but I am stuck
>>> on on a minor issue. I want to use Css to hide a peice of text from VO.
>>>
>>
>> Could you possibly elaborate on why you need to hide it from VO in
>> particular?
>>
>> --
>> Benjamin Hawkes-Lewis
>>
>>
>
>
> --
> Alex A.AWEBSIGHT administrator
> AWEBSIGHT web team
> "Blindness is a gift, not a disability."
> B.C unit
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> http://www.VisionMail.uni.cc/
>



-- 
Alex A.AWEBSIGHT administrator
AWEBSIGHT web team
"Blindness is a gift, not a disability."
B.C unit
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
http://www.VisionMail.uni.cc/

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