hi there,
> I'm wondering if a site would be more accessible if the flash intro (never
> mind how it's a bad idea to have a flash intro!) skipped automatically if
> the viewer had seen the intro before. I'm also wondering if I could detect
> browser for the sight impaired and skip the intro then
Hi
The first thing you should do, and it's probably a topic for project
decision maker/manager is to ask the question... "if we need a skip
link then is the "intro" useful in the first place?".
If the intro describes the company somehow then serve the homepage and
provide a link to the flash piece
I had to do this for a job once and all i used was an anchor in the
flash movie and then called the anchor up when sum1 went back to the
main page. Hope that helps.
-Karl Brightman
Jorge Laranjo wrote:
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Hi there Lisa!
I think you can use the flash acc
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Hi there Lisa!
I think you can use the flash accessibility enabled!
Check this feature in
http://www.macromedia.com/macromedia/accessibility/features/flash/
- --
Atentamente,
Jorge Laranjo
site > http://thetaoofwebdesign.tk/
email> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
m
I have always used a manual skip intro button on intro flash animations.
Maybe flashkit.com would be a better source for finding an auto skip method
method.
-Kevin
**
The discussion list for http://webstandardsgroup.org/
See http://webstandard
Lisa B. McLaughlin wrote:
I'm also wondering if I could detect
browser for the sight impaired and skip the intro then too.
Blind and visually impaired users use the same browsers everybody else
uses. JAWS and other screenreaders simply sit "on top of" the entire OS,
so they use standard IE an
I'm wondering if a site would be more accessible if the flash intro (never
mind how it's a bad idea to have a flash intro!) skipped automatically if
the viewer had seen the intro before. I'm also wondering if I could detect
browser for the sight impaired and skip the intro then too.
I'm new to