> <span class="smaller geo">
> <abbr class="latitude" title="52.453856"></abbr>52^27'14"N
> <abbr class="longitude" title="-1.748028"></abbr>01^44'53"W
> </span>
> I admire the lateral thinking, but I wonder if this is any better, from
> the PoV of people using assistive technology? If it is, it would seem to
> provide a simple work-around to recent concerns.
At first glance I can't imagine how that could be any better for AT,
since it still leaves the user with the raw coords being vocalised,
possibly twice in a row. But realistically it needs a quick test by AT
users to know for sure.
I also think calling an empty element "valid HTML" stretches the truth a bit :)
Also, speaking as a human being, what is the point of lat/lon
information being displayed to me anyways? I cannot fathom where that
might be from two numbers, unless you run it through a geolocator or
show me a map.
Isn't the most sensible and accessible then to use spans and do a .geo
span{display:none;} thus hiding the information both from users with
vision and screen reader users?
Geo stretches the microformats idea of building on already used
content a lot. I cannot ever recall writing down my lat/lon on any
form.
--
Chris Heilmann
Book: http://www.beginningjavascript.com
Blog: http://www.wait-till-i.com
Writing: http://icant.co.uk/
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