RE: Techniques for 2.2.3

Hi Mark. Home Page Reader does the same and plans the same. So far there
are no candidates for the "Many assistive technologies that ... " I feel
strongly that making statements like that triviallizes a the efforts of
folks doing assistive technologies.

Jim Thatcher
IBM Special Needs Systems
www.ibm.com/sns
HPR Documentation page: http://www.austin.ibm.com/sns/hprdoc.html
thatch@us.ibm.com
(512)838-0432


"M. Hakkinen" <hakkinen@prodworks.com> on 11/24/99 06:40:34 PM

To:   James Thatcher/Austin/IBM@IBMUS, "Al Gilman" <asgilman@iamdigex.net>
cc:   w3c-wai-ua@w3.org
Subject:  RE: Techniques for 2.2.3




pwWebSpeak allows synthesizer language changing for the page under these
conditions:

1. The LANG attribute is specified in the HTML element.
2. The LANG attribute corresponds to one of the installed synthesizer
languages.

Users can manually switch the "reading" synthesizer to one of the installed
languages, if no LANG attribute is present.

Presently we don't switch on LANG attributes within a page (though we are
likely to add that). We do note significant time delays when switching
between some synthesizers (eg, some SAPI engines may exhibit a long load
time, particularly when using engines from different vendors). That has
been
a concern of mine if we switch on arbitrary LANG attributes appearing in
the
page as it could introduce unnatural reading flow.


mark

> -----Original Message-----
> From: w3c-wai-ua-request@w3.org [mailto:w3c-wai-ua-request@w3.org]On
> Behalf Of thatch@us.ibm.com
> Sent: Wednesday, November 24, 1999 6:24 PM
> To: Al Gilman
> Cc: w3c-wai-ua@w3.org
> Subject: Re: Techniques for 2.2.3
>
>
>
>
> For goodness sake. The assertion is about "many assistive technologies"
> recognizing and responding to language tags in documents. Festival is a
> speech synthesis project. I, personally, do not consider that to be an
> assistive technology. Raman has worked with audio style sheets, but that
> doesn't say that he is language switching based on language tags; maybe
he
> does. Many?
>
> Jim Thatcher
>
>
> Al Gilman <asgilman@iamdigex.net> on 11/24/99 05:33:50 PM
>
> To:   w3c-wai-ua@w3.org
> cc:
> Subject:  Re: Techniques for 2.2.3
>
>
>
>
> At 12:12 PM 11/24/99 -0600, thatch@us.ibm.com wrote:
> >
> >
> >> Many assistive technologies understand different languages and can
> render
> >> them according to the language attribute defined for a certain part of
> >the
> >> document.
> >
> >I don't know of any such assistive technologies.
>
> Doesn't the ACSS implementation in EmacSpeak let you do this?
>
> I don't know many others, but the Festival TTS system from Edinburgh
does:
>
>  http://www.cstr.ed.ac.uk/projects/festival/
>
> Al
>
> >
> >Jim Thatcher
> >IBM Special Needs Systems
> >www.ibm.com/sns
> >HPR Documentation page: http://www.austin.ibm.com/sns/hprdoc.html
> >thatch@us.ibm.com
> >(512)838-0432
> >
> >
> >Marja-Riitta Koivunen <marja@w3.org> on 11/24/99 11:58:52 AM
> >
> >To:   w3c-wai-ua@w3.org
> >cc:
> >Subject:  Techniques for 2.2.3
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >I hope this is OK as starting point. Gregory promised to make another
> >iteration.
> >
> >Marja
> >
> >2.3 Render content according to natural language identification
> >
> >Let user select the default natural language or languages in priority
> order
> >that she normally prefers to receive content.  As content in the
> preferred
> >language might not always be available, the user needs to be able to see
> >what languages are available in the current presentation and select from
> >these.
> >
> >Many assistive technologies understand different languages and can
render
> >them according to the language attribute defined for a certain
> part of the
> >document. For  instance, a screen reader might change the
> pronunciation of
> >the text according to the language definition. This is usually
> desired and
> >done according to the capabilities of the tool. Some specialized tools
> >might give some finer user control for the pronunciation as well.
> >
> >Sometimes the user might also want to know when the text
> contains parts in
> >other languages. How to render the change of language should be made
user
> >controllable by the user agent. For instance, the user might choose to
> hear
> >"language:new language e.g. German" when the language changes to German
> and
> >"language: default language" when it changes back. Alternatively or in
> >addition, the language change could also be rendered visually as text
> >withing the document. User should be able to turn this on or off as it
> >might be disturbing to users understanding the languages. (Maybe the UA
> >could use stylesheets for implementing the change when available.) In
> >addition, if possible the UA might have interpretations
> available behind a
> >link or provide a separate function for that.
> >
>
>
>
>
>

Received on Wednesday, 24 November 1999 20:29:29 UTC