Adam Martin skrev:
Hey guys... it is great that talk about accessibility and chrome has
been raised - but I do think that we need to wait until it is out of beta.
A beta is supposed to be feature complete. otherwoise it's an alpha.
Lars Gunther
Concerning Chrome, I have some unanswered questions about V8.
Exactly what JavaScript features does it support? (This is NOT a
question about it's speed.)
The release statememt simply says that it follows the EcmaScript 3.0
standard, but we all know that it is quirky in places and that
Just playing around in the console..
On Fri, Sep 5, 2008 at 1:56 AM, Keryx Web [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Concerning Chrome, I have some unanswered questions about V8.
Exactly what JavaScript features does it support? (This is NOT a question
about it's speed.)
The release statememt simply
Breton Slivka skrev:
- Array and string generics
You can apply array functions to strings, if that's what you mean.
And vice versa
- Expression closures
I don't know how you could have javascript without those. Pretty much
every website would break. Event handlers would be impossible.
On Fri, Sep 5, 2008 at 3:33 AM, Keryx Web [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Adam Martin skrev:
Hey guys... it is great that talk about accessibility and chrome has been
raised - but I do think that we need to wait until it is out of beta.
A beta is supposed to be feature complete. otherwoise it's an
Because it's HTML it's accessible.
Ah, no, not always.
If a web user has a cognitive disability, requiring them to perform a math
function (cognitive ability) may be another accessibility barrier itself.
YMMV, of course, depending upon the accessibility standard you wish to
achieve, or you may
Hi Christian,
Just clear up my understanding, folks; is Internet Explorer accessible
because Microsoft builds the accessibility features
The short answer is yes
Details of the accessibility of internet Explorer can be found in the
VPAT (voluntary product accessibility template) supplied by
The short answer is yes
Details of the accessibility of internet Explorer can be found in the
VPAT (voluntary product accessibility template) supplied by Microsoft:
(http://download.microsoft.com/download/c/2/3/c23bc250-5f80-4d0c-a29d-877355ff
91e8/IE7_VPAT%20version%201%200.doc)
Thanks
I'm making my first steps regarding web accessibility, and today I was
checking the RNIB.org.uk website when I found this news
articlehttp://www.rnib.org.uk/wacblog/news/petition-to-save-john-slatin%E2%80%99s-accessibility-institute/in
their blog. I quote:
John Slatin, a respected member of the
Has anyone noticed how Hotmail is 'unavailable' in Chrome?? Recommending
one upgrades to either: IE, FF or Safari.
Could this be a snub by Microsoft?? Innocent browser compatability issue?
What's the opinion?
Seconds out...Round 3
2008/9/5 Michael Horowitz [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Because that is
i've read the following two articles and i would entertain some
feedback on using access keys. i'm slowly bringing my web site up to
better accessibility standards and i have a few more things to do like
add a skip nav link and access keys. any other articles and resources
would be appreciated
On Fri, Sep 5, 2008 at 11:25 PM, dwain [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
i've read the following two articles and i would entertain some
feedback on using access keys. i'm slowly bringing my web site up to
better accessibility standards and i have a few more things to do like
add a skip nav link and
Check this Read the Book..
http://www.google.com/googlebooks/chrome/index.html
Srini
On Fri, Sep 5, 2008 at 4:14 AM, Nancy Gill [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
One thing I have noticed today is that it creates 3 different processes in
the Task Manager to run one coyp of chrome. I have tested this
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of dwain
Sent: Friday, September 05, 2008 7:25 PM
To: web standards group
Subject: [WSG] best practices for using access keys
i've read the following two articles and i would entertain some
feedback on
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