2012
Hands free browsing – an interview with Kim Patch | » Henny Swan's blog
I first got to know Kim Patch when we worked together on the W3C User Agent Accessibility Working Group. As a resident of the Web since it’s inception and a long term voice input / non mouse user I was always fascinated to hear what she had to say about making web content, and how a browser interprets that content, accessible.
CSS Properties Index · Jens O. Meiert
by 3 others (via)HTML5: Techniques for providing useful text alternatives: developer edition
This document contains author conformance requirements for use of the alt attribute in HTML5 and best practice guidance for authors of HTML documents on providing text alternatives for images.
This specification is an extension to the HTML5 specification [HTML5]. All normative content in the HTML5 specification, unless specifically overridden by this specification, is intended to be the basis for this specification.
The top 8 web standards myths debunked | Feature | .net magazine
Lea Verou takes a look at some of the misconceptions of web standards, what the W3C and its working groups actually do and how the standardisation process works
L’évaluation de l’accessibilité des sites Web selon le W3C | Accessiblog.fr
Le W3C a publié le 27 mars 2012 un « early draft » d’une méthode harmonisée d’évaluation des sites web. Bonne nouvelle, en apparence, mais on y trouve une petite phrase de rien du tout, qui pourrait bien s’avérer lourde de conséquences.
Les 5 mythes et vérités de HTML5 - Alsacreations
by 1 other2011
How design could save the W3C — an article by Ben Schwarz
While preparing my HTML workshop, I’ve been re-reading W3C specs in far further detail than I ever would’ve imagined. The reading experience is far from delightful. Not only is the text the entire browser width in measure, but it’s dense and laborious to read. No wonder browser vendors have traditionally missed subtle details.