On 1/19/07, Jorge Godoy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
There should be some fallback...  :-(  Removing some effects but making the
application accessible.

I have no idea why Flex 2 requires Flash 9. I'm not sure if that was a
technical or marketing decision.

How can I bookmark the viewing of the second photo -- and later the fifth
photo, both counting from the left -- on that application, then?  I'd like to
say "Hey, mom, take a look at these two pictures!" without having to tell her
"go here, count the second and the fifth from the left and take a look at
them". :-)

I don't think the Display Shelf component does that, but it *could*.
Most of the standard Flex components let you specify when you want to
update the browser location so that the back button can work.

> is a problem with apps in every technology :)

Indeed it is.  But if we can minimize this problem then lets do it. (Just as a
reference on what looks like the future:
http://ajaxian.com/archives/dutch-government-websites-be-accessible-or-break-the-law)

That is about accessibility and not usability. More specifically, that
appears to be mostly about providing free access to information.

Personally, I wouldn't advocate creating a website that delivers
"content" in Flash. HTML is very good for displaying documents. But,
if you're creating a web-delivered *application*, Flex is a really
good tool (that happens to generate Flash). And it is accessible. You
can give everything keyboard shortcuts and screenreaders can read the
text.

Kevin

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