In a similar vein: Reflecting on, and by way of responding to, the upcoming
Quantum release of Firefox, which will impact accessibility (and cause us
problemsd, it must be said); Jonathan Mosen has written the Freedom Scientific
Blog entry at: .
http://blog.freedomscientific.com/2017/10/25/important-information-for-users-of-mozilla-firefox/
- So as is usual, we’ll get a downside unless we go into the slow lane and
wait. (In this case, we have a temporary work-round by installing the Extended
Service Release version of Mozilla Firefox. A link to do so is provided within
the article.)
From: Gerry Ellis
Sent: Friday, September 29, 2017 9:25 PM
To: vicsireland@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [vicsireland] Re: Rethinking Web Accessibility On Windows
Hi,
Excellent. This is the kind of thing that prompted W3C to produce Authoring
Tool and user Agent Accessibility Guidelines as well as the Web Content
Accessibility Guidelines that most people know about. The authoring tool is
what is used to create t6he web site. The user agent is the browser used by you
and me.
Take care,
Gerry Ellis
If you don’t know where you’re going,
How will you know when you get there?
From: vicsireland-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:vicsireland-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Flor Lynch
Sent: Friday, September 29, 2017 9:04 PM
To: vicsireland@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [vicsireland] Rethinking Web Accessibility On Windows
This is an interesting article by Marco Zehe about changes that are happening
(primarily due to Dynamic Content, inter alia) in the presentation of Web
content; and which will need to be made accessible differently for our
screenreaders and us in the future; in his Blog, at:
https://www.marcozehe.de/2017/09/29/rethinking-web-accessibility-on-windows/
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