Re: My ATAG Glossary action items (draft)

As part of my action item, I have made changes to the following terms 
(see attached):

accessibility information
Any information that is added to Web content for the purpose of avoiding 
or correcting Web content accessibility problems (e.g., text 
descriptions of images, role and state information, relationships within 
complex tables).

authoring practice
A technique that guides authors or the authoring tool in selecting 
authoring actions to apply to content in order to achieve particular 
authoring outcomes. (e.g., controlling presentation with style sheets). 
An accessible authoring practice is one that seeks to avoid or correct 
one or more Web content accessibility problems. Some accessible 
authoring practices require accessibility information.



Also, in revisiting "authoring tool user interface (Web-based)" and 
"authoring tool user interface (non-Web-based)" I'm considering 
proposing we:

1. Reformulate "authoring tool user interface (Web-based)" as follows:

authoring tool user interface (Web-based)
Any parts of an authoring tool user interface (including documentation,
etc.) that are implemented using Web content technologies such that
authors access them via a user agent. For example, a Wiki Web application.

2. Eliminate "authoring tool user interface (non-Web-based)" and instead 
just say "not Web-based" wherever we need to.

Any ideas?

Cheers,
Jan














Jeanne Spellman wrote:
> Minutes <http://www.w3.org/2009/01/05-au-minutes>
> 
> IRC Log <http://www.w3.org/2009/01/05-au-irc>
> 
> *Action Items*
> ACTION: JR - take another try at: "accessibility information" ... make 
> it more direct
> ACTION: JS to update the document to add to the introduction of the 
> Glossary section to add the text "definitions are normative, examples 
> are informative."
> ACTION: JS to update the document with new text for "accessibility problem"
> ACTION: JS to update the document with new text for accessible content 
> support features
> ACTION: JS to update the document with new text for assistive technologies
> ACTION: JS to update the document with new text for audio
> ACTION: JS to update the document with new text for authoring action
> ACTION: JS to update the document with new text for Platform 
> Accessibility Architecture [
> 
> 
> *Text of Minutes*
> 
> W3C
> - DRAFT -
> WAI AU
> 05 Jan 2009
> 
> Agenda
> 
> See also: IRC log
> Attendees
> 
> Present
>     JR, Jeanne, Greg, Andrew, Jutta, Tim
> Regrets
>     Ann
> Chair
>     Jutta Treviranus
> Scribe
>     JR
> 
> Contents
> 
>     * Topics
>          1. Glossary review
>     * Summary of Action Items
> 
>  
> 
>  
> 
> <jeanne> zakim who is here?
> 
> http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/w3c-wai-au/2008OctDec/0083.html
> 
> Actual link to attachment: 
> http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/w3c-wai-au/2008OctDec/att-0083/ATAG_Glossary_Review.doc
> Glossary review
> 
> <AndrewR> JR: first term abbreviation. adding "adapted from" WCAG 2.0 in 
> the brackets
> 
> <AndrewR> JR: agreed at F2F in Redmond to not follow WCAG 2.0s style exactly
> 
> http://www.w3.org/TR/WCAG20/#glossary
> 
> <jeanne> http://www.w3.org/WAI/AU/2008/WD-ATAG20-20081202/#glossary
> 
> <AndrewR> JS: "enhance" seems to be indicate an "improvement". 
> "engineer" may be a better word
> 
> <AndrewR> JS: "provide" would be suitable
> 
> A programmatic interface that is specifically engineered to provide 
> communication between mainstream applications and assistive technologies 
> (e.g., UIA, MSAA and IAccessible2 for Windows applications, AXAPI for 
> MacOSX applications, Gnome Accessibility Toolkit API for Gnome 
> applications, Java Access for Java applications, etc.). On some 
> platforms it may be conventional to enhance communication furt
> 
> her by implementing a document object.
> 
> <jeanne> ACTION: JS to update the document with new text for Platform 
> Accessibility Architecture [recorded in 
> http://www.w3.org/2009/01/05-au-minutes.html#action01]
> 
> <trackbot> Created ACTION-68 - Update the document with new text for 
> Platform Accessibility Architecture [on Jeanne Spellman - due 2009-01-12].
> 
> <AndrewR> JR: could remove "severity" from the sentence
> 
> accessibility problem
> 
> ATAG 2.0 refers to two types of accessibility problems:
> 
> 1. authoring tool user interface accessibility problem: An aspect of an 
> authoring tool user interface that does not meet one of the success 
> criteria in Part A.
> 
> 2. Web content accessibility problem: An aspect of Web content that does 
> not meet a WCAG success criteriaon.
> 
> 1. authoring tool user interface accessibility problem: An aspect of an 
> authoring tool user interface that does not meet a success criterion in 
> Part A.
> 
> accessibility problem
> 
> ATAG 2.0 refers to two types of accessibility problems:
> 
> 1. authoring tool user interface accessibility problem: An aspect of an 
> authoring tool user interface that does not meet a success criterion in 
> Part A.
> 
> 2. Web content accessibility problem: An aspect of Web content that does 
> not meet a WCAG success criterion.
> 
> <jeanne> ACTION: JS to update the document with new text for 
> "accessibility problem" [recorded in 
> http://www.w3.org/2009/01/05-au-minutes.html#action02]
> 
> <trackbot> Created ACTION-69 - Update the document with new text for 
> \"accessibility problem\" [on Jeanne Spellman - due 2009-01-12].
> 
> accessibility information
> 
> Any information that is necessary for undertaking an accessible 
> authoring practice (e.g., text descriptions of images, role and state 
> information, relationships within complex tables).
> 
> <jeanne> +1
> 
> <scribe> ACTION: JR - take another try at: "accessibility information" 
> ... make it more direct [recorded in 
> http://www.w3.org/2009/01/05-au-minutes.html#action03]
> 
> <trackbot> Created ACTION-70 - - take another try at: \"accessibility 
> information\" ... make it more direct [on Jan Richards - due 2009-01-12].
> 
> accessible content support features
> 
> Any features of an authoring tool that directly support authors in 
> increasing the accessibility of the content being edited (i.e., in 
> meeting any of the success criteria in Principle B.2).
> 
> assistive technology [adapted from WCAG 2.0]
> 
> Software and/or hardware that provides functionality to meet the 
> requirements of users with disabilities that goes beyond direct 
> accessibility features offered by mainstream applications. Assistive 
> technology functionality includes alternative presentations (e.g., as 
> synthesized speech or magnified content), alternative input methods 
> (e.g., voice), additional navigation or orientation...
> 
> scribe: mechanisms, and content transformations (e.g., to make tables 
> more accessible). Examples of assistive technologies that are important 
> in the context of this document include the following:
> 
> <jeanne> ACTION: JS to update the document with new text for accessible 
> content support features [recorded in 
> http://www.w3.org/2009/01/05-au-minutes.html#action04]
> 
> <trackbot> Created ACTION-71 - Update the document with new text for 
> accessible content support features [on Jeanne Spellman - due 2009-01-12].
> 
> • screen magnifiers, and other visual reading assistants, which are used 
> by people with visual, perceptual and physical print disabilities to 
> change text font, size, spacing, color, synchronization with speech, 
> etc. in order improve the visual readability of rendered text and images;
> 
> • screen readers, which are used by people who are blind to read textual 
> information through synthesized speech or braille;
> 
> • text-to-speech software, which is used by some people with cognitive, 
> language, and learning disabilities to convert text into synthetic speech;
> 
> • speech recognition software, which may be used by people who have some 
> physical disabilities;
> 
> • alternative keyboards, which are used by people with certain physical 
> disabilities to simulate the keyboard (including alternate keyboards 
> that use head pointers, single switches, sip/puff and other special 
> input devices);
> 
> • alternative pointing devices, which are used by people with certain 
> physical disabilities to simulate mouse pointing and button activations.
> 
> http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/w3c-wai-au/2008OctDec/att-0083/ATAG_Glossary_Review.doc
> 
> assistive technology [adapted from WCAG 2.0]
> 
> Software and/or hardware that provides functionality to meet the 
> requirements of users with disabilities that goes beyond direct 
> accessibility features offered by mainstream applications. Assistive 
> technology functionality includes alternative presentations (e.g., as 
> synthesized speech or magnified content), alternative input methods 
> (e.g., voice), additional navigation or orientation...
> 
> scribe: mechanisms, and content transformations (e.g., to make tables 
> more accessible). Examples of assistive technologies that are important 
> in the context of this document includes but are not limited to the 
> following:
> 
> Software and/or hardware that provides functionality to meet the 
> requirements of users with disabilities that goes beyond direct 
> accessibility features offered by mainstream applications. Assistive 
> technology functionality includes alternative presentations (e.g., as 
> synthesized speech or magnified content), alternative input methods 
> (e.g., voice), additional navigation or orientation...
> 
> scribe: mechanisms, and content transformations (e.g., to make tables 
> more accessible). Note: Examples of assistive technologies that are 
> important in the context of this document includes but are not limited 
> to the following:
> 
> • screen magnifiers, and other visual reading assistants, which are used 
> by people with visual, perceptual and physical print disabilities to 
> change text font, size, spacing, color, synchronization with speech, 
> etc. in order improve the visual readability of rendered text and images;
> 
> • screen readers, which are used by people who are blind to read textual 
> information through synthesized speech or braille;
> 
> • text-to-speech software, which is used by some people with cognitive, 
> language, and learning disabilities to convert text into synthetic speech;
> 
> • speech recognition software, which may be used by people who have some 
> physical disabilities;
> 
> • alternative keyboards, which are used by people with certain physical 
> disabilities to simulate the keyboard (including alternate keyboards 
> that use head pointers, single switches, sip/puff and other special 
> input devices);
> 
> • alternative pointing devices, which are used by people with certain 
> physical disabilities to simulate mouse pointing and button activations.
> 
> Note: Examples of assistive technologies include, but are not limited 
> to, the following:
> 
> <jeanne> +1
> 
> audio [adapted from WCAG 2.0]
> 
> The technology of sound reproduction. Audio can be created synthetically 
> (including speech synthesis), recorded from real world sounds, or both.
> 
> <jeanne> ACTION: JS to update the document with new text for assistive 
> technologies [recorded in 
> http://www.w3.org/2009/01/05-au-minutes.html#action05]
> 
> <trackbot> Created ACTION-72 - Update the document with new text for 
> assistive technologies [on Jeanne Spellman - due 2009-01-12].
> 
> authoring action
> 
> Any action that authors can take using the authoring tool user interface 
> that results in editing content (e.g., typing text, deleting, inserting 
> an element, applying a template). Most authoring tool user interfaces 
> also enable actions that do not edit content (e.g., setting preferences, 
> viewing documentation).
> 
> <jeanne> ACTION: JS to update the document to add to the introduction of 
> the Glossary section to add the text "definitions are normative, 
> examples are informative." [recorded in 
> http://www.w3.org/2009/01/05-au-minutes.html#action06]
> 
> <trackbot> Created ACTION-73 - Update the document to add to the 
> introduction of the Glossary section to add the text \"definitions are 
> normative, examples are informative.\" [on Jeanne Spellman - due 
> 2009-01-12].
> 
> Any action that authors can take using the authoring tool user interface 
> that results in creating or editing content (e.g., typing text, 
> deleting, inserting an element, applying a template). Most authoring 
> tool user interfaces also enable actions that do not edit content (e.g., 
> setting preferences, viewing documentation).
> 
> <jeanne> +1 to new definition. More brief, more clear.
> 
> authoring outcome
> 
> The content modifications that result from authoring actions. The scope 
> of authoring outcomes range from narrow (e.g., inserting a link) to wide 
> (e.g., adding a site-wide navigation system). Authoring outcomes are 
> cumulative (e.g., text is entered, then styled, then made into a link, 
> then given title).
> 
> <jeanne> ACTION: JS to update the document with new text for audio 
> [recorded in http://www.w3.org/2009/01/05-au-minutes.html#action07]
> 
> <trackbot> Created ACTION-74 - Update the document with new text for 
> audio [on Jeanne Spellman - due 2009-01-12].
> 
> <jeanne> ACTION: JS to update the document with new text for authoring 
> action [recorded in http://www.w3.org/2009/01/05-au-minutes.html#action08]
> 
> <trackbot> Created ACTION-75 - Update the document with new text for 
> authoring action [on Jeanne Spellman - due 2009-01-12].
> 
> The content modifications that result from authoring actions (e.g., 
> inserting a link, adding a site-wide navigation system). Authoring 
> outcomes are cumulative (e.g., text is entered, then styled, then made 
> into a link, then given a title).
> 
> The content or content modifications that result from authoring actions 
> (e.g., inserting a link, adding a site-wide navigation system). 
> Authoring outcomes are cumulative (e.g., text is entered, then styled, 
> then made into a link, then given a title).
> 
> The content or content modifications that result from authoring actions. 
> Authoring outcomes are cumulative (e.g., text is entered, then styled, 
> then made into a link, then given a title).
> 
> <jeanne> JS to update the document with new text for authoring actions
> Summary of Action Items
> [NEW] ACTION: JR - take another try at: "accessibility information" ... 
> make it more direct [recorded in 
> http://www.w3.org/2009/01/05-au-minutes.html#action03]
> [NEW] ACTION: JS to update the document to add to the introduction of 
> the Glossary section to add the text "definitions are normative, 
> examples are informative." [recorded in 
> http://www.w3.org/2009/01/05-au-minutes.html#action06]
> [NEW] ACTION: JS to update the document with new text for "accessibility 
> problem" [recorded in http://www.w3.org/2009/01/05-au-minutes.html#action02]
> [NEW] ACTION: JS to update the document with new text for accessible 
> content support features [recorded in 
> http://www.w3.org/2009/01/05-au-minutes.html#action04]
> [NEW] ACTION: JS to update the document with new text for assistive 
> technologies [recorded in 
> http://www.w3.org/2009/01/05-au-minutes.html#action05]
> [NEW] ACTION: JS to update the document with new text for audio 
> [recorded in http://www.w3.org/2009/01/05-au-minutes.html#action07]
> [NEW] ACTION: JS to update the document with new text for authoring 
> action [recorded in http://www.w3.org/2009/01/05-au-minutes.html#action08]
> [NEW] ACTION: JS to update the document with new text for Platform 
> Accessibility Architecture [recorded in 
> http://www.w3.org/2009/01/05-au-minutes.html#action01]
>  
> [End of minutes]

-- 
Jan Richards, M.Sc.
User Interface Design Lead
Adaptive Technology Resource Centre (ATRC)
Faculty of Information (i-school)
University of Toronto

   Email: jan.richards@utoronto.ca
   Web:   http://jan.atrc.utoronto.ca
   Phone: 416-946-7060
   Fax:   416-971-2896

Received on Tuesday, 6 January 2009 15:52:10 UTC