I've been "completely off" on many occasions. However, I'd be wary of any
definitive statement, especially in the area of accessibility. While we all
crave right and wrong answers, there are often many shades of gray.  :)

While blind users are not the only target audience for title attributes,
there is growing evidence that this attribute is very poorly supported on
the <a> element by many screen readers. For example, JAWS allows users to
read the title attribute within <a> elements but only if users change their
setting in "verbose" mode. I've spoken to blind users who were either not
aware of this setting or deliberately do not use it as it is simply too much
information.

Steve Faulkner has been doing detailed research in this area and will be
presenting his findings and recommendations at WE05 next week - "The title
attribute - What is it good for? Absolutely nothing!"
http://www.we05.com/program.cfm

Derek Featherstone also raises doubts about the title attribute here:
http://webstandardsgroup.org/features/derek-featherstone.cfm#myth
"Consider a simple technique like adding title attributes to links. Despite
the fact that we may use the attribute correctly, the effectiveness of doing
so is unknown. Yet we take it for granted that it helps."

Peace
Russ


> You guys are completely off here. Links are supposed to be like this:
> 
> Get < a href="http://www.url.com"; title="Link to download Amaya, the W3C Web
> Browser for testing">Amaya< /a>
> 
> Links without titles are already inaccessible, regardless of context. 

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