When user of a computer understands languages and techniques it will be helpful to him, the functions also will be understood by him, with the functions the features also can be maximized with awareness, pc cursor mode in jaws is referred to the virtual buffer, when the person views the HTML documents which are in the supported applications it can be toggled by using on and off by the key stroke combinations when the person wants to see these things he has to access HTML elements.
Jaws sometimes respond inconsistently to the scripting
Since March 1997 SMIL become a significant new technology which helps integrate multimedia into Web content. The importance of SMIL has grown with the apparition of its 2.0 version. SMIL offers XML-based technology for managing the presentation and timing of multimedia elements. SMIL is used in the software and technologies supported by Adobe, Microsoft, and the Real Networks.
Taking in consideration the development and support for the 2.0 specification, SMIL has the perspective of becoming a standard approach for the developers which work
Accessibility languages and techniques can only function so far as the user understands them. In addition to that, features can be maximized with awareness. "The virtual buffer is referred to as Virtual PC Cursor mode in JAWS. Virtual PC Cursor mode is enabled by default when viewing HTML documents in supported applications (such as Internet Explorer and Firefox with JAWS 7.0), and can be toggled on and off using the keystroke combination Insert + Z. In this mode, the user has access to HTML elements and their attributes, such as the th element for
Roberto Scano offers a detailed and informative history of website accessibility: "The first web revolution happened on the 14th January 1997: HTML 3.2 was issued from a consortium called the W3C, a consortium not yet known to web developers. As written in the document's introduction, HTML 3.2 is the W3C's specification for HTML, developed in early 1996, together with vendors including IBM, Microsoft, Netscape Communications Corporation, Novell, SoftQuad, Spyglass, and Sun Microsystems. HTML 3.2 added widely deployed features such as tables, applets
In a sense, nobody is in charge of the web. The web is an open standard, with no restrictions on who can post content, or what that content should be about. The web belongs to everybody, and so it belongs to nobody. The openness and decentralization of the web is one of its greatest strengths. But it wouldn't work at all without some sort of standard way of encoding the information. That's where the World Wide Web consortium (W3C) comes in.
The W3C is an international, vendor-neutral group that determines the protocols and standards for the web. They
In What’s *Your* Story?, Ian Lloyd wants to know what made everybody get into Web accessibility. It’s a great question, and I find it very interesting to read the stories people have posted so far.
Personally I have several reasons for advocating Web accessibility. First of all an idealistic one:
* I want everybody to be able to use the Web. I am not disabled (yet), so I can (and am often forced to) muddle through sites that are badly built, but a person with a disability may not be able to. Since it is possible to build sites that almost