Hi Elizabeth,
true, there has only been one successful litigation action.
The people behind a certain Grocery site might be getting a little nervous
at the moment :)
What worries me is that there are many larger government sites in Australia
that are a lot less accessible than that one... I wond
Hi Tee
In Australia, websites are covered by Disability Discrimination legislation,
although there has only been one successful suit to date. Bruce Maguire was
awarded damages of $20,000 against SOCOG in 2000: full details here:
http://www.hreoc.gov.au/disability_rights/decisions/comdec/2000/DD00
Nancy Johnson wrote:
If I come to a site with music playing, I leave it immediately without
looking at the site. I don't know best practices, but I believe the
user needs to be in control.
same here.
what's even worse is if there's no volume/pause button CLEARLY visible
on the page to quickly
Love it lolol
Its my era of course
Kate
- Original Message -
From: "Dennis Lapcewich" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:
Sent: Friday, August 15, 2008 8:57 PM
Subject: RE: [WSG] Acceptable autoplay of music
IMHO, an unacceptable autoplay web site:
** AutoPlay Loud Music Warning! Turn DOWN y
IMHO, an unacceptable autoplay web site:
** AutoPlay Loud Music Warning! Turn DOWN your speakers! **
http://www.daveclarkfive.com
** AutoPlay Loud Music Warning! Turn DOWN your speakers! **
Dennis
***
List Guidelines: h
Thanks for all the responses. The majority seem to pretty much agree
with my view that it would be better to have the user initiate the
music. The player I'm planning on using does have very clear controls
for playback and volume, so if the client does *insist* on auto-playback
I will definitely be
Auto start false then let the audience choose if to play or not.
Kate
http://jungaling.com/Malaysia/
- Original Message -
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Sent: Friday, August 15, 2008 4:16 PM
Subject: RE: [WSG] Acceptable autoplay of music
On a more po
On a more positive note - you could point out that having an embedded
player would allow the band to offer the user a choice of music, which
would be a better option than alienating many users. (Offering a client
a 'better option' usually goes down a lot better than 'don't do that!')
>From an acc
Hi,
same here - I personally hate autoplay on site, I'm gone in a sec
I also think this does affect anyone - personal preference or not - people
can be caught out by this, in office environments (as mentioned before) as
well as impaired users
And though a band site might warrant the autop
Return Receipt
Your Re: [WSG] Acceptable autoplay of music
document:
If I come to a site with music playing, I leave it immediately without
looking at the site. I don't know best practices, but I believe the
user needs to be in control.
On Fri, Aug 15, 2008 at 10:36 AM, Nick Taylor <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Good morning James,
>
> If it helps, what you will fin
I think it shouldn't automatically play the songs, it's really annoying from
my point of view, specially when the volume is set to 100%. If you really
need to play the songs automatically, I would suggest setting the volume to
50% or somewhere near that value. You should make the player visible so
On Aug 15, 2008, at 10:14 AM, James Leslie wrote:
Hi,
This is a more best practices question than strictly standards, but
I *think* it is on-topic, apologies if not and please mail me off-
list if you feel that is more appropriate.
I have a band for a client who are requesting that on the
Good morning James,
If it helps, what you will find is the typical user experience on band
websites is that the audio player automatically starts within 2-3 seconds of
the site fully loading. The file size of the player and the audio file are
both small so the site isn¹t slow when being viewed on
Hello James;
I *think* it needs to be a choice of the user - if not it'll add to the
confusion for screen readers
and also annoyance for the user waiting for the download and start of the music.
Regards
~Veine
On 15 Aug 2008 at 15:14, James Leslie wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> This is a more
Hi James,
To my mind, the user always needs to initiate it.
Regards,
Schalk
James Leslie wrote:
Hi,
This is a more best practices question than strictly standards, but I
*think* it is on-topic, apologies if not and please mail me off-list if
you feel that is more appropriate.
I have a ba
Hi,
This is a more best practices question than strictly standards, but I
*think* it is on-topic, apologies if not and please mail me off-list if
you feel that is more appropriate.
I have a band for a client who are requesting that on the homepage
loading a music player starts automatically. Do
>An individual who brings a case under the DDA can seek
>monetary compensation. However, the law is supposed to be a
>last resort, and users are expected to give the website owner
>the opportunity to make the website accessible before
>resorting to law. Failure to do so suggests that the plaint
Thanks Steve for the clarification.
OK, in the risk of showing more ignorant, I still have question. My
understanding on WCAG guidelines, are the fundamental principle of DDA,
Section 508 and similar law in other countries correct? When a website is to
be DDA or Section 508 compliant, for lack
wrong account ;) Sorry for that.
Kim
---
http://www.geekministry.com
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