08:04:13 RRSAgent has joined #apa 08:04:17 logging to https://www.w3.org/2023/09/12-apa-irc 08:04:21 zakim, start meeting 08:04:21 RRSAgent, make logs Public 08:04:23 please title this meeting ("meeting: ..."), matatk 08:04:30 meeting: APA TPAC Tuesday 08:04:36 topic: Compute Pressure API 08:04:40 rrsagent, make minutes 08:04:42 I have made the request to generate https://www.w3.org/2023/09/12-apa-minutes.html matatk 08:05:23 present+ 08:05:23 present+ Joyce 08:05:23 scribe: Irfan: 08:05:23 Present+ Anssi_Kostiainen 08:05:23 scribe: Irfan 08:05:23 present+ 08:05:23 [2023-09-12 10:03] 08:05:23 Present+ Kenneth_Christiansen 08:05:29 s/[2023-09-12 10:03] // 08:05:33 present+ 08:06:26 https://github.com/w3c/a11y-request/issues/53 08:07:52 Document for editing: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1io7w3Iu9QSZ-NHfpHwQe-VTGILCL7ckqj8qUMITir4Q/edit?usp=sharing 08:08:42 q+ 08:08:58 matatk: The purpose of this specification is how to improve user experience. 08:09:29 matatk: there are accessibility consideration that we have discussed. 08:10:13 q? 08:12:13 matatk: ack anssi 08:12:14 q? 08:12:17 ack anssik 08:12:22 ack anssik 08:13:43 anssik: there is not much to do on browser implementation. UI for reporting is not really a strong use-case but it is a good illustration. 08:16:11 present+ Joyce 08:17:14 kenneth_Christiansen: explaining examples 08:18:23 there are challenges including exposing global state, can be used for side-channel attack etc 08:19:44 matatk: we want specs accessible to be read. that would help to show people that it is different. 08:20:03 anssik: we will incorporate the required changes in the doc 08:23:57 https://www.w3.org/TR/compute-pressure/ 08:25:27 we have partners like zoom who uses this API. we support use in dedicated and shared workers. we have iframe support 08:28:46 we worked with PING to create good mitigations 08:29:22 we believe we have solved the security issues 08:29:49 matatk: I never would have thought that it could be done. it is fascinating 08:30:41 anssik: it is another example how horizontal review can help improving our work 08:30:57 specs is very stable currently 08:31:41 it has passed multiple reviews including google privacy team, 08:32:02 in future we can handle various use cases 08:32:36 rrsagent, make minutes 08:32:37 I have made the request to generate https://www.w3.org/2023/09/12-apa-minutes.html Irfan 08:33:07 q? 08:33:10 anssik: we are open for any further feedback and contribution 08:33:50 matatk: we are equally pleased with this work. like any new tech it has big potential to improve accessibility 08:34:06 Lisa_ has joined #apa 08:34:41 is algorithm published anywhere ? 08:35:12 if there is time should we bring up coga? 08:36:19 anssik: we did many prototyping to achieve this 08:37:22 present+ 08:43:36 q? 08:44:16 matatk: what sort of bandwidth did it give you such as displaying "Hello world" 08:44:21 anssik: 30 minutes 08:45:05 we always working to improve the algorithm. 08:45:18 also, it depends on the system capability 08:45:37 mitigations are much stronger what would be needed in real world. 08:47:01 30 minutes was initial phase sending the data and get response. I ahve made few optimization in algorithm. perhaps someone can have better idea infuture 08:49:45 https://www.w3.org/WAI/standards-guidelines/ 08:50:14 https://www.w3.org/WAI/tutorials/ 08:52:40 matatk: I wonder if we can find a realistic application for accessibility perspective 08:53:25 anssik: game streaming 08:56:44 s/PING/Privacy Interest Group (PING) 08:59:06 anssik: we are meeting on thursday to discuss it more and you all are welcome to join. 08:59:53 RRSAgent: make minutes 08:59:54 I have made the request to generate https://www.w3.org/2023/09/12-apa-minutes.html Irfan 09:00:01 q? 09:08:47 Roy has joined #apa 09:13:56 matatk has joined #apa 09:24:52 matatk has joined #apa 09:26:11 duga has joined #apa 09:34:47 Roy has joined #apa 09:36:44 zakim, who is here 09:36:44 Irfan, you need to end that query with '?' 09:36:44 rrsagent, make minutes 09:36:45 I have made the request to generate https://www.w3.org/2023/09/12-apa-minutes.html matatk 09:36:50 zakim, who is here? 09:36:50 Present: Anssi_Kostiainen, Kenneth_Christiansen, matatk, Roy, Irfan, Joyce, Lisa_ 09:36:50 On IRC I see Roy, duga, matatk, Lisa_, RRSAgent, Zakim, anssik, Irfan, jamesn, wendyreid, nigel, jasonjgw, bkardell_, janina, gb, imlostlmao, gonzu_15, M2cshkpcgrp, ada, Rachael, 09:36:50 ... tink, agendabot, ZoeBijl, slightlyoff, cwilso, jcraig 09:37:11 topic: Internationalization 09:43:49 addison has joined #apa 09:44:20 rrsagent, pointer? 09:44:20 See https://www.w3.org/2023/09/12-apa-irc#T09-44-20 09:45:24 xfq has joined #apa 09:46:45 xfq has joined #apa 09:46:45 present+ 09:46:45 rrsagent, make minutes 09:46:46 I have made the request to generate https://www.w3.org/2023/09/12-apa-minutes.html matatk 09:51:46 Bert has joined #apa 09:52:48 scribe+ Roy 09:52:57 scribe- 09:53:39 mitch11 has joined #apa 09:53:47 scribe+ mitch11 09:53:47 scribe+ mitch11 09:54:21 present+ 09:54:24 subtopic: Interlinear publications 09:54:37 rrsagent, make minutes 09:54:38 I have made the request to generate https://www.w3.org/2023/09/12-apa-minutes.html matatk 09:55:17 janina: accessibility is in sad shape for multilingual content 09:55:17 ... opportunity: EPub 3.3 is done 09:55:18 q? 09:55:25 ... blue sky now, what can we do for TTS (text to speech)? Braille is not so bad 09:55:53 present+ Bert Bos (I18N WG) 09:56:03 ... subject matter examples: religious text, music 09:56:04 present+ Addison (I18N) 09:56:20 present+ Fuqiao (i18n) 09:56:28 ... we'll talk to i18n, maybe HTML 09:56:35 ... Epub is interested, talking with APA 09:56:55 ... translations flow differently 09:57:01 ... people are currently hacking, how do we hack less? 09:57:14 One example that were shared yesterday: https://www.scripture4all.org/OnlineInterlinear/NTpdf/mat1.pdf 09:57:19 ... opportunity for curb cut effect, not just for people with disabilities 09:57:46 Another example that was shared yesterday (uses a table): https://biblehub.com/interlinear/matthew/1-1.htm 09:57:48 ... example: interlinear text could be made easier to understand 09:57:55 rrsagent, make minutes 09:57:56 I have made the request to generate https://www.w3.org/2023/09/12-apa-minutes.html matatk 09:58:03 ... modern languages and ancient languages 09:58:21 ... different speeds for different languages per user preference 09:58:30 s/speeds/TTS speeds/ 09:58:49 matatk: examples pasted above 09:59:17 addison: by internlinear, clarify a doc with multiple languages? 09:59:24 janina: yes 09:59:57 addison: it's a familiar problem, established in print, there will be interesting challenges in digital 10:00:12 ... language tags, other techniques 10:00:26 janina: Irfan is working on pronunciation 10:00:35 ... assessment is needed 10:00:55 s/internlinear/interlinear/ 10:01:03 addison: where looking for assistance or gaps? 10:01:19 janina: knowledge or prior art would be helpful, we're just starting 10:01:47 example by hand hebrew english https://mechon-mamre.org/p/pt/pt0.htm 10:01:56 addison: I imagine people use existing HTML or Epub structures. Are standards around this lacking? 10:02:13 janina: curb cut mention 10:03:29 matatk: seen PDFs and HTML tables to align things. It gets the alignment but it's hard to read. Maybe something like Timed Text would be analogous 10:03:48 janina: what is the increment that makes sense? word level probably not 10:04:35 addison: and word order varies by language 10:04:35 ... so generally want sentence-level alignment 10:04:48 ... I started in Bell Labs doing text alignment. It's a challenge, e.g. when starting texts are not yet aligned 10:04:49 rrsagent, make minutes 10:04:50 I have made the request to generate https://www.w3.org/2023/09/12-apa-minutes.html matatk 10:05:00 janina: we have inline lang, that's about it 10:05:31 addison: that presumes someone has identified the alignment 10:05:52 ... can be by sentence, by paragraph; could be by line but word order gets in the way 10:06:09 ... so I would think about authoring tools 10:06:18 q? 10:07:02 r12a has joined #apa 10:07:02 shawn has joined #apa 10:07:06 rrsagent, make minutes 10:07:07 I have made the request to generate https://www.w3.org/2023/09/12-apa-minutes.html matatk 10:08:49 r12a: introductions 10:08:54 ... what are the use cases? 10:08:54 we can add symbols 10:08:54 janina: we want to improve support for going back and forth between two languages, while learning or improving a language 10:08:54 ... we want TTS (Text to Speech) to work better. (Braille is already pretty good) 10:09:04 ... we want it to benefit users beyond people with disabilities ("curb cut" effect) 10:09:19 ... example: studying religious texts 10:09:38 ... we think there's enough with markup and user agents, but we don't have it now 10:09:58 ... epub folks are also ready to blue-sky this with APA 10:10:24 r12a: so people can read the other language to understand their own language? 10:10:34 janina: and for language learning 10:11:13 r12a: language learning affects alignment, for example smaller segment alignment for some kinds of language learning 10:11:41 janina: authoring could be flexible to address different goals with similar mechanisms 10:11:57 r12a: and sometimes multiple languages? Example: Tibetan texts 10:12:01 janina: or opera libretti 10:13:12 matatk: summary: good introduction to interlinear, would appreciate info from i18n on prior art later offline 10:13:56 subtopic: what plans does i18n have for exploratory blue sky, which could benefit from APA accessibility participation? 10:13:57 be it useful or not, this may spark some ideas...(?). https://r12a.github.io/blog/201708.html#20190304 10:13:57 https://github.com///r12a.github.io/blog/201708.html/issues/20190304 -> #20190304 10:14:18 addison: a lot of i18n is horizontal review, not blue sky 10:14:33 ... we also do language gap analysis 10:14:50 what are the needs for different languages on the need, and how well do technologies support that? 10:15:01 subtopic: i18n exploratory work 10:15:04 ... examples Korean, Ethiopic languages 10:15:59 addison: actual current work: bidirectional language and metadata, could be crossover with APA 10:16:22 r12a: we've been talking with WCAG 10:16:48 ... currently recommendations should expand line spacing, word spacing, appears to be based on English or Latin-based languages 10:17:03 ... but e.g. Japanese puts space differently 10:17:23 ... and some languages don't have spaces between words 10:17:47 rrsagent, make minutes 10:17:49 I have made the request to generate https://www.w3.org/2023/09/12-apa-minutes.html Irfan 10:17:57 coga and internationalizing https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1rAukW3tEH9DKW9MdU9RAVgfj8OBckZxo8rZ1BiTOhyU/edit?usp=sharing 10:17:59 q+ 10:18:02 ... so what are actual readability needs? 10:18:34 present+ Shawn(12:00) 10:18:43 subtopic: coga task force intro 10:19:30 matatk: Lisa Seeman's group is on "Making Content Usable..." doc 10:19:48 Lisa_: That doc is one activity. 10:20:12 ... also there's WCAG 3, the next version, which is more flexible (than 2.x) to do this kind of thing 10:20:20 ... how much is enough? is it doable? 10:20:40 ... want to work closely with i18n, not as an add-on later 10:21:01 rrsagent, make minutes 10:21:02 I have made the request to generate https://www.w3.org/2023/09/12-apa-minutes.html matatk 10:21:33 ... want to develop the guidance e.g. simple text and voicing, how do a sample of 5 or 6 languages for conditional tests 10:22:48 ... perhaps opportunity: cognition can be a barrier; in parallel language knowledge can be a barrier for users 10:24:02 r12a: The list of languages for rollout in stages. Depending on what you're recommending, e.g. sentence length 10:24:24 ... then the choice of language examples will vary by the goal 10:24:51 ... but if it were more about typography then a different set of languages would be pertinent 10:25:25 ... Going with 4-5 initially could build barriers later 10:25:58 ... So recommend grouping the languages around criteria, likely for later success 10:26:47 joyce): those kinds of rules for 10:26:56 ... good automatic translation 10:27:14 Lisa_: big overlap between accessibility and translation 10:27:47 janina: Wrapping up for another call, this was good for queuing up next conversations 10:28:29 matatk: scheduling Thursday or Friday this week to do 10:28:51 addison: "object permanence" we exist when we've left the room, we're available 10:28:58 ... earlier is better 10:30:13 topic: EO - Maturity Model and Adapt 10:30:16 rrsagent, make minutes 10:30:17 I have made the request to generate https://www.w3.org/2023/09/12-apa-minutes.html matatk 10:30:23 BrianE has joined #APA 10:30:37 kakinney__ has joined #apa 10:30:41 fbedora has joined #apa 10:31:46 matatk: introducing two specs that APA has been working on 10:31:54 ... marketing the maturity model 10:31:59 ... and adapt 10:32:24 ... anything EOWG wants to raise? 10:32:44 present+ Fazio 10:32:44 present+ 10:32:48 present+ 10:33:20 matatk: round of introductions 10:35:53 subtopic: Maturity Model 10:36:05 https://www.w3.org/TR/maturity-model/ 10:36:22 janina: We might have some time on this, but it's getting attention frequently so maybe sooner 10:36:52 ... frequent question: why another maturity model? We have answers which would benefit from communications 10:36:54 Maturity Model breakout tomorrow: https://www.w3.org/events/meetings/ae47e209-26bf-44f3-8ac8-7936879c979d/ 10:37:36 ... Adapt: aim is for people to participate more fully, related to symbols 10:38:10 ... Adapt might be quicker 10:38:19 Adapt breakout tomorrow: https://www.w3.org/events/meetings/89a19590-3b11-41d1-8129-c03c870f6c29/ 10:38:56 rrsagent, make minutes 10:38:57 I have made the request to generate https://www.w3.org/2023/09/12-apa-minutes.html matatk 10:39:03 s/quicker/sooner/ 10:39:37 s/Maturity Model/Overview/ 10:39:37 rrsagent, make minutes 10:39:38 I have made the request to generate https://www.w3.org/2023/09/12-apa-minutes.html matatk 10:40:18 s/subtopic: Maturity Model/subtopic: Overview/ 10:40:26 subtopic: Maturity Model Messaging 10:41:05 rrsagent, make minutes 10:41:06 I have made the request to generate https://www.w3.org/2023/09/12-apa-minutes.html matatk 10:41:26 fazio: many maturity models around, they're often sales tools, not developed with W3C way of developing 10:41:28 q? 10:41:59 ... so it makes sense for W3C to offer 10:42:19 ... it's gotten input from around the world, and with participation of people with disabilities 10:42:26 ... free for use 10:42:53 janina: identify problems sooner 10:43:46 ... in all technology areas, customer facing or internal facing, everything is a web page, which makes importance 10:44:05 ... expect readiness before next TPAC 10:44:18 ... tracking status is a part of it 10:44:26 q+ 10:45:02 q- 10:45:19 q? 10:45:54 scribe+ 10:45:58 matatk: There are two others that I'm aware of that people will be asking about, contrasting the W3C model with: ISO's [I don't have a link] and the UK Business Disability Forum's https://businessdisabilityforum.org.uk/knowledge-hub/resources/tech-taskforce-accessibility-maturity-model/ 10:46:08 matatk: past question received: what is difference from other past maturity models? summary of answer above 10:46:19 Q+ 10:46:53 ... the UK Business Disability Forum has another maturity model, touches some points that Fazio mentioned, we can anticipate such questions 10:46:54 ack matatk 10:47:03 fazio: Yes we've been getting such questions 10:47:20 ... ISO is behind paywall, and uses their kind of language content 10:47:33 ... we've incorporated from these sources 10:48:04 ... re measuring over time: there's need for evidence of claims, this should help 10:48:13 ... US context: how to demonstrate "readily achievable" 10:48:34 ... entity can show the government, and can also show people (the public) 10:48:55 ... AAPD, disability index, companies love to announce 80% or more achievement 10:49:16 ... similar opportunity for this maturity model 10:49:20 ack Lisa_ 10:49:25 Lionel_Wolberger has joined #APA 10:50:05 Lisa_: a few years ago she worked on UN based G3ICT, not sure about distribution since then 10:50:47 fazio: they're more focused on universities and Smart Cities; Fazio is in touch; they don't overlap (with this maturity model effort) 10:51:04 Lionel_Wolberger_ has joined #APA 10:51:08 ... also differences in business goals 10:51:12 agenda? 10:51:17 present+ 10:51:21 q? 10:51:30 i think it was focused on smart cities 10:51:43 BrianE: A big question will be why is W3C doing this. Do you already have rationale prepared? 10:52:11 fazio: yes, somewhere in the written it has the why question 10:52:56 kakinney__: context: hasn't yet gotten through reading the content of the model 10:53:24 ... re this model's spreadsheet, comparing with another org's scorecard, both are Excel 10:53:51 ... putting the report result on a website might need to bump up in priority 10:54:03 ... akin to accessibility statement builder 10:54:14 fazio: or the EM conformance reporting tool 10:55:02 kakinney__: what's tangible, can hand to people in orgs with less accessibility knowledge 10:55:02 fazio: it's jargony right now, still working on, identifying what phase you're in 10:55:24 ... we're iterating, want feedback now on the spreadsheet 10:55:25 duga has joined #apa 10:55:30 q+ to ask Equity maturity model 10:55:32 janina: and the spreadsheet format is temporary in this iteration 10:55:53 kakinney__: feedback on the spreadsheet could go in the wrong direction 10:56:04 fazio: we have a statement saying so 10:56:22 matatk: above could be a good point of collaboration with EOWG 10:56:45 shawn: recall the equity group was interested it becoming an equity maturity model 10:56:56 rrsagent, make minutes 10:56:58 I have made the request to generate https://www.w3.org/2023/09/12-apa-minutes.html matatk 10:57:05 fazio: it's designed to be extensible 10:57:36 ... tbd if guidance on how to do that will be included 10:57:36 shawn: both activities are occurring in W3C, so encourage coordinate sooner than later 10:58:01 fazio: difficulty to get done current scope, so this group has needed to stay focused 10:58:21 ... happy to work with groups who wish to extend 10:58:49 shawn: don't want two groups working on two similar maturity models, yet different 10:59:37 fazio: yes let's talk and join forces, and meanwhile the group has held our feet to the disability scope 11:00:25 shawn: request Roy make the contacts 11:00:45 subtopic: Adapt 11:01:24 Lionel_Wolberger_: WAI-Adapt continues accessibility work of decades, shout out to call participants' long-time contributions 11:01:50 ... Adapt is about personalizing an experience beyond what content creator had in mind 11:02:04 ... especially for people with cognitive disabilities 11:02:30 ... think of icons and their accompanying text 11:02:52 ... also think of pictures in text messages 11:03:40 ... now ready to go to technical Recommendation: a way to semantically indicate a symbol 11:03:41 ... drew from AAC 11:03:57 ... and we have consensus from the AAC community 11:04:12 ... this can be a huge curb cut. Some need, all benefit. 11:04:50 ... paper handout today 11:05:30 ... the word "symbols" was carefully chosen to be understood by some, but also is overloaded term in a tech professional context e.g. halls of TPAC 11:05:48 ... The rendition of the symbol is international 11:05:59 s/international/internationalized/ 11:06:24 fazio: Accessibility Association of Europe (AATE), is doing a lot with symbols, connect with Dominic 11:06:31 matatk: We have a demo tomorrow 11:06:52 ... including the authoring side 11:07:09 ... have mechanism for mapping between sets, but don't have the actual mapping yet 11:07:48 ... two sides of the paper handout show two symbol sets of the same four step example: "My Favorite Recipe Video (chapter list)" 11:08:14 q+ to say IF people are OK delaying lunch - brief intro of other WAI-Adapt modules? 11:08:27 kakinney__: clarifying the identifiers on the handouts of symbol sets: ARASAAC and Blissymbolics 11:09:06 shawn: actually I OKed the W3C logo and handout, but not all of the content 11:09:08 q? 11:09:13 ack shawn 11:09:13 shawn, you wanted to ask Equity maturity model and to say IF people are OK delaying lunch - brief intro of other WAI-Adapt modules? 11:09:26 ... todo includes the handout onto the overview page so we have it digital 11:09:41 ... remind us the other planned modules 11:09:56 matatk: A range of things, in terms of capabilities not modules: 11:10:19 ... things that COGA has identified as problematic, but solvable with metadata 11:10:26 ... looking at simplification 11:10:32 ... and distraction 11:10:38 janina: and standard destination 11:11:09 matatk: we've stumbled on solving navigation ease, e.g. logging out 11:11:27 ... machine can determine based on standard URLs precedent 11:11:42 ... might not be in this spec but would build on others 11:12:09 janina: metadata would be at the element level, this is important. Today we have it only at the page level. 11:13:01 matatk: thank you for thoughtful questions, looking forward to continued scrutiny and working together 11:14:39 rrsagent, make minutes 11:14:40 I have made the request to generate https://www.w3.org/2023/09/12-apa-minutes.html matatk 11:30:30 kirkwood has joined #APA 11:31:11 matatk has joined #apa 11:42:07 matatk has joined #apa 11:53:03 matatk has joined #apa 12:04:00 matatk has joined #apa 12:04:59 AvneeshSingh has joined #apa 12:05:40 kirkwood has joined #APA 12:06:53 wolfgang has joined #apa 12:09:38 anssik has joined #apa 12:12:09 present+ 12:13:48 CharlesL has joined #apa 12:14:00 present+ wolfgang 12:14:06 George has joined #apa 12:14:33 present+ 12:14:57 matatk has joined #apa 12:15:33 present+ 12:17:45 present+ 12:18:15 gpellegrino has joined #apa 12:18:17 gautier has joined #apa 12:18:20 present+ 12:18:27 present+ 12:20:58 Lionel_Wolberger has joined #APA 12:21:38 topic: EPUB 3 Accessibility 12:21:43 rrsagent, make minutes 12:21:45 I have made the request to generate https://www.w3.org/2023/09/12-apa-minutes.html matatk 12:24:31 scribe+ 12:24:31 Roy has joined #apa 12:24:49 xfq has joined #apa 12:24:54 https://github.com/w3c/epub-specs/wiki/Image-Missing-When-Described-in-Context 12:24:59 xfq has left #apa 12:25:41 subtopic: APA Use Case: §image management when a description is already part of the text content 12:25:49 https://github.com/w3c/publishingcg/issues/68 12:26:22 Bill_Kasdorf_ has joined #apa 12:27:39 scribe+ 12:28:33 matatk: so the issue is about images described in context; if we completely hide it to endusers it's a problem, we should find a solution for telling that the image is described in context 12:28:58 ... a new proposal may be to add a role to say that the image is not decorative, but is described in the context 12:29:45 janina: Not APA consensus, but we discussed it and had several thoughts. One of the issues was that an appropriate description of an image depends on the context. 12:30:13 ... E.g. Looking at an image from a theatre costume design, or set design, perspective. 12:30:30 Bert has left #apa 12:30:34 ... We also found that we would want to be able to reference the image in order to share it with others. 12:31:21 matatk: everybody agreed that we don't want to hide the image, so to be able to point at the image 12:31:50 q+ 12:32:57 q+ 12:34:00 CharlesL: We're here because publishers are asking for guidance. They're either putting "image described in surrounding text" a lot OR if the image is described in an extended description, they're saying "image described in extended description linked below". 12:34:41 ack CharlesL 12:35:16 CharlesL: This is happening in books that are going live, and people are wondering if it was acceptable. 12:35:16 ... It would be ideal to come to a solution to this that is not hard coded into the alt text. 12:35:16 janina: We didn't get inot the mechanics, but that makes sense. 12:35:17 q? 12:35:29 s/inot/into/ 12:37:28 matatk: I see possible issues with the abuse of this new role, telling that every image is described in surrinding text 12:37:43 +1 to @matak 12:37:43 https://github.com/matak -> @matak 12:37:48 s/surrinding/surrounding/ 12:38:19 q+ 12:38:43 q? 12:38:50 matatk: (Hopefully done a reasonable job of putting across Jason's concern.) 12:38:51 q? 12:38:55 ack matatk 12:38:59 ack Bill_Kasdorf_ 12:39:26 q+ 12:39:50 Bill_Kasdorf_: Agree with what you just said. In my experience, surrounding text is more likely to highlight the image than describe it. Most important thing for complex images is the extended description. 12:40:30 ... Both of the things that CharlesL said might be sub-optimal, but pointing to the extended description is likely the best way. 12:40:33 q? 12:40:36 ack CharlesL 12:40:46 q+ Joyce 12:42:05 CharlesL: I've also seen publishers put s below the image. E.g. a complex table (that's too complicated to render). 12:42:05 s//
/ 12:42:18 ... The caption doens't want to be repeated in the alt text description. What would we put in the alt text? There would be an extended description (that is the actual table) that's linked. 12:42:31 ... (Publishers are doing this; maybe a better concrete example.) 12:42:40 ack Joyce 12:42:48 s/doens't/doesn't/ 12:44:01 Joyce: The figcaption is info for everyone to better understand the image. The alt text should be for the SR user. I ask: how could I refer a sighted person to that image? Look for the image with "the table of cars sold". 12:44:08 q+ 12:44:15 ... So the alt text is about sharing/working with people. 12:45:54 jasonjgw: In the example that CharlesL gave, publshers shouldn't be putting tables in images (which CharlesL ACK'd). If they do, how does one know that the image is not a graph? The only way to do that is to put something in the alt attr that says it's an image of the table. Say what the image represents in a way that's clear for the reasder. 12:45:59 rrsagent, make minutes 12:46:00 I have made the request to generate https://www.w3.org/2023/09/12-apa-minutes.html matatk 12:46:34 ... That would meet guidance and best practices, so we can already handle this with what we have. There would likely be reisstance to defining new roles. Then all the accessibility guidance would have to be modified to reflect this. Long-term thing. 12:46:55 s/reisstance/resistance/ 12:47:04 q+ 12:47:22 ack jasonjgw 12:47:27 ack George 12:48:01 George: If we do nothing and null alt text means the image is hidden, then I think we have a binary decision, where if it's decorative, alt is null, otherwise all the time, we need alt text. Even if the image is described in surrounding text. 12:48:15 +1 to George 12:48:17 ... I do think that means that all of our guidelines need to change to reflect that position. 12:48:29 subtopic: Markup in Chapter titles 12:48:32 +1 was thinking the same thing. 12:50:26 q+ 12:54:06 AvneeshSingh: EPUB refers to/is based on the latest version of HTML. 12:54:08 ack gpellegrino 12:54:42 gpellegrino: In Italy there are experiments into using symbols in digital books. There are IP problems with some of the symbols. 12:55:10 ... There are different schools on how to apply/how much to apply the symbols. There is not so much scientific agreement on this. 12:55:16 Are the symbols in unicode? Could they be? 12:55:29 ... The books are made in fixed layout format. 12:56:09 ... This is not the best format for accessibility, as can't be adapted so much. The symbols normally appear on top of different words. I see a possible issue with reading systems in the EPUB world. 12:56:34 ... It's not only rendering HTML. Adding symbols would have to repaginate the document. 12:57:06 ... Microsoft Inclusive Reader was developed for EPUB, now applies to HTML, and is already implemented, but only uses their collection of images. 12:58:41 subtopic: Expert handlers/embedded media 12:58:53 duga has joined #apa 12:58:53 https://github.com/w3c/publishingcg/issues/66 12:59:47 janina: Some kinds of objects we put into books (I wrote it for music, but could be any number of disciplines) we're unlikely to cover well in UAs, but specialist reading tools exist. E.g. there's music software that gives a high level of functionality. 13:00:08 ... Being able to hand over to the specialist viewer app, and back, at the right places, would be very helpful. 13:00:23 q+ 13:00:28 janina: There are many ways, e.g., that we would like to navigate musical content; applies to other content too. 13:00:36 https://github.com/w3c/epub-specs/issues/1227 13:00:39 ack AvneeshSingh 13:01:15 AvneeshSingh: The above issue talks about including MusicXML in EPUB. EPUB is XHTML so can include other XML markups. 13:01:33 ... I don't see a challenge on this side, but more on the browser side. 13:02:00 janina: I see the issue as bringing in the code that you need for the specialist feature set at the time, and then switch/hand back to the browser at the right time. 13:02:08 ... Like iframes but with more smarts. 13:02:12 AvneeshSingh: Like MathML? 13:02:31 janina: Not sure we've decided on this yet; there is a lot of open source code out there. 13:02:49 AvneeshSingh: We used to use the same appraoch for MathML before UAs started supporting it. We could adopt a similar approach. 13:03:04 ... What's the ask? Are we looking for borwsers to support certain XMLs natiely, or polyfills? 13:03:28 s/borwsers/browsers/ 13:03:35 janina: I don't thing UAs are going to support all of these natively; niche user groups. 13:03:44 kirkwood has joined #APA 13:03:47 s /natiely/natively/ 13:03:56 AvneeshSingh: What are we looking for in the spec to address this? New attributes/elements to identify these types of media? 13:04:08 janina: Yes. Particularly means to hand off control and get it back. 13:06:25 matatk: Onxce we have clarity on how to get content into EPUB docs, we could create a proof-of-concept browser extension to test the hand-off (there are ways to interface with native apps but not sure how smooth the handoff would be)l 13:06:34 s/)l/)./ 13:06:42 s/Onxce/Once/ 13:06:48 AvneeshSingh: What should our next steps be? 13:07:01 CharlesL: Make an example document containing these types of content and go from there? 13:07:36 janina: Last we talked about this "expert handlers" breakout 2017 - the room was full! 13:10:13 rrsagent, make minutes 13:10:15 I have made the request to generate https://www.w3.org/2023/09/12-apa-minutes.html matatk 13:11:37 q? 13:12:19 q+ 13:12:28 q+ 13:12:30 ack George 13:13:28 George: One approach we might follow is that of @@ which is building the code for Eelectron, and then offering it to the browser for inclusion in their codebase. 13:13:44 s/@@/Igalia/ 13:13:48 ... This means the codebase as developed could be used as an extension but eventually contributed back to the browser for its core code. 13:14:24 janina: Agree, there are lots of use cases for this in music alone. Lots of educational possibilities. 13:14:36 George: I can see many areas where we'd love to see it in browsers. 13:15:07 ... Maybe a process for a company who's engaging in the form of software development would add more weight to this, and help the browser folks keep track. 13:15:34 gautier has joined #apa 13:16:40 matatk: +1 to George 13:17:24 matatk: I'd like to prototype things to see where the gaps are, but we need some way to get professional code written and build these sorts of relationships. 13:17:31 janina: The code for Muse Score 4 is open. 13:18:02 ... What is not there is the kind of things you'd want as a learner of music, such as setting A and B points and setting the tempo of the music, because when you're a learner, you want to go slowly, and then get faster. 13:18:31 ... This is an external process to the browser. 13:20:10 matatk: I think a lot of this might be do-able with Browser Extensions, but a challenge would be ensuring the rendering in the browser is up to date with where the app was when it was closed. 13:20:18 q? 13:20:24 ack jasonjgw 13:21:20 jasonjgw: One of the use cases is given the graphical and auditory capability of the web these days and the ability to comppile to WASM, both music programs and chemistry markup editors could be brought into the browser. Some office programs have already made that transition. 13:21:50 s/comppile/compile/ 13:21:53 ... How well is that going to be supported for all of the accessibility services? 13:25:16 matatk: Agree. I like to use mobile apps as expert handlers. Not sure how well WASM (and UI adaptations) would work on mobile. 13:25:16 jasonjgw: The external app handover situation is still the simpler one. 13:25:16 ... Especially if you can get the reverse direction communication too. 13:25:52 ... Editing needs to be accessible too! That's why I'm worried about the case of in-browser native apps. 13:28:00 subtopic: Symbols markup revisited 13:28:32 gautier has joined #apa 13:28:32 George: With DPUB ARIA roles, we could associate symbols with things like chapters. 13:29:47 janina: We need to be able to use the registry's symbol codes, so that the right symbol could be produced. 13:30:09 matatk: Could we vary the symbol with the DPUB ARIA approach? 13:31:00 George: Sometimes H1 is chapter, sometimes H1 is part, H2 is chapter. In either case, you'd use the role doc-chapter. 13:33:49 matatk: Our idea is to mark up the concept that is reflected in the chapter heading, hence the need for variable symbols (not just the concept of "a chapter") 13:34:10 George: Different types of books would have different types of chapters; woudln't have roles for each. 13:34:37 s/woudln't/wouldn't/ 13:36:44 matatk: We would be wanting to use our adapt-symbol attribute to provide the concept for the chapter. 13:37:08 janina: We could also refer to the doc-chapter role and render a symbol that says "chapter" too 13:38:47 matatk: Really cool that we have the idea of structure from George and content from us. Could have a UA that supports both. 13:39:02 janina: You could also reassemble the content on the fly. 13:39:06 q? 13:40:52 subtopic: Interlinear publications 13:41:03 matatk: We spoke with i18n about this earlier. 13:41:21 janina: This exists in multiple ways, and can be described in multiple ways. 13:42:10 janina: We're talking about better handling of content in multiple languages side-by-side with some form of synchronization. 13:42:52 ... Could be word-by-word, or line-by-line. Could be studying an ancient text, or an opera libretto. 13:43:05 janina: i18n thought sentence-level may be most effective. 13:44:16 janina: If reading a book in multiple languages, there may be different speeds needed for the TTS in each language, for example. 13:44:22 q? 13:45:11 Lionel: We raised this last year; since then I got a little more insight. Turns out it's not just words being linked across lines. Comics are a similar thing: the text and the drawing are as related as sentences in two different languages. 13:45:23 ... We need a semantic method for relating two things that are meant to be rendered together. 13:45:36 ... We've seen examples using HTML tables but they're not appropriate. 13:45:53 One example that were shared yesterday: https://www.scripture4all.org/OnlineInterlinear/NTpdf/mat1.pdf 13:45:59 Another example that was shared yesterday (uses a table): https://biblehub.com/interlinear/matthew/1-1.htm 13:46:23 q+ 13:46:53 matatk: Again makes me think of Timed Text, but the axis isn't time. 13:47:07 Lionel: +1, but synchronizing experience, not time. 13:47:30 Lionel: Comics again: "if you're dealing with this dialog, you want to be dealing with this panel" 13:47:33 ack George 13:47:51 George: Was going to mention comics and managa. 13:48:06 q+ 13:48:19 s/managa/manga/ 13:48:30 matatk: I remember reading comics when I got an iPad and they had ways to help zoom into the comic and navigate between panels. Any known standards? 13:48:50 George: I am aware of work going on on it, and it is an interesting problem, and being worked on. 13:49:11 ... Would need to get more involved in order to find out the status. 13:49:37 Lionel: there is a kown file format CDR/CDC [? may be wrong - scribe] 13:49:55 s/kown/known/ 13:50:05 jasonjgw: Work on Ruby may be related? 13:50:56 jasonjgw: There's a Ruby base and Ruby text, and maybe if that info is accessible, similar mechanisms could be usd for what we're discusing (not the same markup, but from an accessibilty PoV they could turn out to be similar). 13:51:13 s/usd/used/ 13:51:35 s/accessibilty/accessibility/ 13:51:50 q? 13:51:58 ack jasonjgw 13:52:17 q+ 13:52:24 ack wolfgang 13:52:53 Roy has joined #apa 13:53:56 wolfgang: If you want to bind things together in XML, you make a parent element and group the subordinate elements. We could group elements and apply the @lang attr and say whether the contained elements are sentences, paragraphs, or other linguistic divisions. 13:53:56 https://github.com/lang -> @lang 13:54:03 George: That's how it works in SMIL. 13:55:14 ... This sort of navigation is well implemented in DAISY readers. 13:55:48 ... The difference is that audio is king in DAISY, and text is the boss in EPUB. 13:56:02 matatk: Earlier, I was thinking about the idea of a element for text, too :-) 13:57:28 q? 13:58:07 subtopic: Multiple tracks of sign language 13:58:34 janina: This came up in RQTF. A matter of keeping video synchronized at some level, and keeping the signers pinned [as covered in the RAUR -Scribe] 13:59:41 q+ Joyce 13:59:45 jasonjgw: This was multiple tracks of sign language for different sign languages IIRC. 14:00:39 Joyce: Has anyone talked to platform vendors as to if they have thoughts on that. We can set our language. Can we set a sign language as our preferred language in an OS? 14:00:54 janina: There are language codes for different SLs 14:01:01 Joyce: Can they be set in an OS? 14:02:15 janina: We found this in the MAUR - https://www.w3.org/TR/media-accessibility-reqs/ - which we'll be updating with MEIG et al soon. 14:03:26 jasonjgw: When setting up an OS, specifying language and region, that may be enough to infer what the sign language setting would be (though it may not be enough, it might work to a degree). 14:03:52 RAUR mentioned above is https://www.w3.org/TR/raur/ 14:04:46 rrsagent, make minutes 14:04:47 I have made the request to generate https://www.w3.org/2023/09/12-apa-minutes.html matatk 14:05:25 q? 14:05:25 ack Joyce 14:05:41 subtopic: Making UAs better UAs - Footnotes 14:06:13 q+ 14:06:17 https://github.com/w3c/publishingcg/issues/67 14:06:19 q+ 14:07:45 janina: Several cases for how we might want to access footnotes. 14:08:31 ... Inline; Jump to footnote, and then back to content; [other modes of access too, but the point is we need flexibility on how to access them] 14:08:44 q? 14:09:18 jasonjgw: There could be multiple sets of notes in the same document, e.g. translators' notes (about translation issues); author's notes (traditional/scholarly notes); might want to access one or other set differently. 14:09:24 ack jasonjgw 14:09:44 CharlesL has joined #apa 14:09:51 CharlesL has left #apa 14:10:11 jasonjgw: Even in the handling is the same, the abilitiy to distinguish between the series of notes is important. 14:10:22 janina: And that's metadata we don't have. 14:10:36 Bill_Kasdorf has joined #apa 14:10:36 s/abilitiy/ability/ 14:11:12 George: EPUBtest.org tests various UAs reading systems for EPUB content. We're in process of updating our test books. We'll be adding footnotes and MathML testing to the fundamental books (preveiously they were in the experimental/other books). 14:11:37 ... doc-footnote and doc-endnote DPUB-ARIA roles included. 14:11:40 s/preveiously/previously/ 14:12:43 George: Different readers have different ways of treating (rendering/interacting) with them. We want to test the various systems to see what their UI is. At the end of the footnote we have a link back to the content. 14:13:12 ... Various SCs around footnotes. 14:13:39 ... This brings up the need for a "Back" button, which is not commonly implemented. It's a burden on the author to implement this via back links. 14:14:26 matatk: Challenging when a "footnote" is referenced from multiple places, so a Back button would be good. 14:14:39 George: Glossary references may have that issue. 14:14:55 jasonjgw: An example of this may be a note in a table, where multiple cells reference the same note. 14:16:57 George: Fundamental books are for things that are commonly implemented. E.g. MathML used to be in the experimental book, but now is making it into the fundamental one. Back links would liekely be in the experimental book. 14:17:21 s/liekely/likely/ 14:18:11 George: A problem is following a link from the ToC, pressing the down key, and then the screen reader starting again from the top of the document; it's a focus problem. 14:18:20 ... Some readers cope with this, but some don't. 14:18:53 ... It would be better to be able to share how the ones that made it work actually made it work. Thorium hs done it, for example (which is open source). 14:19:10 s/hs/has/ 14:21:35 matatk: It could be a case of adding tabindex=-1 to the element and then .focus()ing it? (This is what the Landmarks extension does.) 14:21:41 George: Please could you write that up? 14:21:44 matatk: Yup! 14:21:58 q? 14:21:59 ack George 14:24:46 q? 14:25:59 subtopic: Exploratory issues 14:26:37 Bill_Kasdorf: Locators. Originally this would be pages; the page breaks could be included in an electronic copy. But now there are lots of things that don't have a print version, and the concept of "page" is fluid. 14:27:01 ... When we ask the publishing community what they want, that comes up a lot of the time. 14:27:17 gautier has joined #apa 14:27:23 George: To add to that, the absence of page navigation in books that have no print equivalent, is a huge issue in the scholarly world where you have to make a reference. 14:27:51 ... People have to grab a PDF version of a fully accessible EPUB and use _that_ for citations, which is sub-optimal. 14:28:21 q+ 14:28:28 ... The locator needs to work consistently acorss reading systems that works consistently across reading systems. 14:28:43 s/acorss/across/ 14:28:52 ... E.g. How to apply this to APA. 14:29:19 matatk: Was wondering about IDs, but are some too long? 14:29:33 George: The problem is the book gets re-issued, and you can't depend on IDs staying the same. 14:30:27 jasonjgw: I made references to sections or chapters in works. That's not a complete solution because you might want to refer to something at a finer level of granularity. In legal texts it's common to have numbered paragraphs. 14:31:02 ... If the text hasn't changed between editions it'd be nice if the references to paras continued to operatre despite other changes to the surrounds. In some cases they're moving to para numbering. 14:31:10 q? 14:31:14 ack jasonjgw 14:31:28 s/operartre/operate/ 14:31:59 Bill_Kasdorf: Agree regarding legal and reference publishing, which does have that granularity in the markup. But the vast majority of content doesn't have that kind of structure. Another issue is indexes. Back of book indexes point to page numbers. 14:32:43 Bill_Kasdorf: Modern readers might wonder what the point of an index is—it's a conceptual overview of the contents of the book (can't just be replaced by search). 14:32:50 Bill_Kasdorf: This is an important accessibility problem. 14:33:02 *general agreement* 14:34:52 Bill_Kasdorf: Suggestion regarding decorative images: clarify that a decorative image "does not convey information" 14:35:15 George: The guidelines actually mention "described in surrounding text" use a null alt attribute. 14:35:43 Joyce: in a book, a photo may not convey meaning, but could convey emotion. 14:36:41 rrsagent, make minutes 14:36:42 I have made the request to generate https://www.w3.org/2023/09/12-apa-minutes.html matatk 15:00:43 gautier has joined #apa 15:01:54 Roy has joined #apa 15:02:19 Irfan has joined #apa 15:02:28 agenda? 15:02:37 present+ 15:02:59 zakim, who is here? 15:02:59 Present: Anssi_Kostiainen, Kenneth_Christiansen, matatk, Roy, Irfan, Joyce, Lisa_, mitch, Bert, Bos, (I18N, WG), Addison, (I18N), Fuqiao, Shawn(12:00), Fazio, BrianE, kakinney__, 15:03:02 ... Lionel_Wolberger_, AvneeshSingh, wolfgang, George, CharlesL, gpellegrino, gautier 15:03:02 On IRC I see Irfan, gautier, kirkwood, Bill_Kasdorf_, gpellegrino, matatk, anssik, wolfgang, shawn, RRSAgent, Zakim, jamesn, wendyreid, nigel, jasonjgw, bkardell_, janina, gb, 15:03:02 ... imlostlmao, gonzu_15, M2cshkpcgrp, ada, Rachael, tink, agendabot, ZoeBijl, slightlyoff, cwilso, jcraig 15:03:05 spectranaut_ has joined #apa 15:03:06 present+ 15:03:09 present+ 15:03:09 topic: AIRA 15:03:10 present+ 15:03:20 s/topic: AIRA/topic: ARIA/ 15:03:24 rrsagent, make minutes 15:03:26 I have made the request to generate https://www.w3.org/2023/09/12-apa-minutes.html matatk 15:03:41 jarhar has joined #apa 15:04:19 Roy has joined #apa 15:05:05 alisonmaher_ has joined #apa 15:05:54 nicole has joined #apa 15:05:54 aaronlev has joined #apa 15:05:54 present+ 15:05:54 present+ 15:05:54 Lionel_Wolberger has joined #APA 15:05:54 present+ 15:05:59 present+ 15:06:01 scribe+ 15:06:34 Fredrik has joined #apa 15:06:37 present+ 15:07:27 Matt_King has joined #apa 15:09:35 subtopic: Notifications 15:10:02 @Lionel: I am happy to back you up as scribe if you want. 15:10:02 https://github.com/Lionel -> @Lionel 15:11:23 agenda? 15:11:44 https://docs.google.com/document/d/17kKNoCIoMSFMFicz0wSQR-PHWHfHGYfz1WdtHMYyrhE/edit#heading=h.r83mzc4f0o33 15:11:51 present+ 15:12:03 Discussing this doc, https://docs.google.com/document/d/17kKNoCIoMSFMFicz0wSQR-PHWHfHGYfz1WdtHMYyrhE/edit#heading=h.r83mzc4f0o33 15:12:25 sarah_higley has joined #apa 15:12:42 updated link: https://github.com/WICG/proposals/issues/112 15:13:02 Discussing Accessibility (ARIA) Notification API #112 15:13:03 https://github.com/w3c/apa/issues/112 -> Issue 112 User Need 9: Any deaf or hard of hearing user watching captioning or audio description needs to be confident it is synchronised and accurate. (by RealJoshue108) [enhancement] [RAUR] 15:13:10 Link, https://github.com/WICG/proposals/issues/112 15:13:16 benb_ has joined #apa 15:13:27 Matt_King: Is it fair to say the scope is nonvisual text as it relates to screen readers? 15:13:36 present+ 15:13:48 Doug: Yes. 15:15:28 matatk: A concern that developers might mix this up with other types of notifications 15:15:42 ... We did see it as imperative announcements 15:15:51 Matt_King: It's an assistive technology notification 15:15:56 jarhar has joined #apa 15:16:12 How about "nudgifications"? Too cutesy? 15:16:14 q+ 15:16:28 s/Matt_King: Is it fair/matatk: Is it fair 15:16:38 matatk: Developers may think they will find here the accessibility of notifications in general, e.g., the accessibility of a toast notification; it is clear that is not in scope, to us, but we are concerned 15:16:43 ... that others might be confused 15:16:44 daniel-montalvo has joined #apa 15:16:55 Matt_King: Proposing: AT Notifications? 15:17:01 janina: AT is very broad 15:17:21 Matt_King: Any AT relying on an accessibility API will be relying on this 15:17:26 q? 15:17:29 jamesn: Propose, put off the naming discussion 15:18:13 jamesn: I share the concern. The name 'ARIA notifications' did not seem best to me, either; it just happens to be a notification that ARIA group discussed 15:18:18 ... there is precedent for this API in every platform accessibility API 15:18:35 matatk: Was the term 'announcements' considered? 15:19:00 s/jamesn: I share/jcraig: I share/ 15:19:18 naomi has joined #apa 15:19:20 aaronlev: We are open to considering other names. 15:19:52 q+ 15:20:02 matatk: Does this need to support braille? 15:21:02 q? 15:21:05 ack jcraig 15:21:09 jcraig: Any speech notification that voice gets for processing will be rendered on an associated braille display (if present) 15:21:25 kevin has joined #apa 15:21:45 aaronlev: We expect to hear from braille users, as the experience varies. 15:21:55 q? 15:22:08 ... though the braille display experience is secondary to the voice experience, ARIA wants to get that aspect right this time. 15:22:08 q+ 15:22:21 ack Fredrik 15:22:47 Doug has joined #apa 15:23:22 q+ 15:23:29 rrsagent, make minutes 15:23:30 I have made the request to generate https://www.w3.org/2023/09/12-apa-minutes.html Irfan 15:24:54 Fredrik: Users have varying expectations regarding notifications 15:25:21 Doug: Would it help if the notification carried more information-- that the notification should flash, should ..? 15:25:41 Fredrik: I am asserting that we need user agency, user control over such notifications 15:26:06 Doug: The AT should take responsibility on how best to present the data to their users 15:26:19 q? 15:26:48 q/ 15:26:53 ack jasonjgw 15:27:04 ... the braille experience of notifications will likely improve, if the teams working on that experience would put more attention on it. 15:29:23 s/will likely improve/will likely improve with the imminent release of several multi-line braille displays/ 15:30:20 s/... the braille experience /jasonjgw: the braille experience / 15:31:46 s/will be rendered/should be rendered/ 15:31:54 q+ 15:32:19 q+ 15:32:21 agenda? 15:32:41 q? 15:32:52 q+ to echo that this fits in the authoring practices which will be part of the process of getting this into a specification 15:32:56 Subtopic: Guidance on appropriate use of notifications 15:33:36 Matt_King: When this is published and people are coding according to this API 15:34:00 ... ARIA will be pleased to broadcast when those drafts are in place and encourage APA's feedback at that time 15:34:12 s/associated braille display (if present)/associated braille display (if present). the portion NOT on the table is that braille and speech notifications would be identical in v1; v1 not planned to include a braille-specific variant notification./ 15:34:17 ... specifically, ARIA will seek APA input on that PR 15:34:35 q- 15:34:48 q? 15:34:59 ack Doug 15:35:10 Doug: MS has a 'confirmation of action' document 15:35:19 ... to encourage the handling of status consistently 15:35:28 ... that type of proposal could accompany this proposal 15:35:45 ... a guideline being, just because something changes doesn't mean you have to get the attention of the screen reader user 15:35:48 q+ 15:36:05 ... In addition, the vision ability varies and can affect your choices 15:36:36 q+ 15:36:48 ... on the AT side, for example, AT might cater to a low vision user in such a way that fewer announcements are made, selecting based on notification ID 15:37:09 ack aaronlev 15:37:11 q- 15:37:13 ack aaronlev 15:37:21 matatk: APA is very interested in raising awareness that not only low vision people are using screen readers 15:37:31 ... people with cognitive disabilities often use screen readers as well 15:37:31 q? 15:37:43 q+ to mention notification API usage for out-of-view notifications for lowviz zoom users 15:37:46 q+ 15:37:54 aaronlev: The process of writing the documentation can be SO HELPFUL to deeply understanding requirements 15:38:24 ... We'd love to see people write up, how they would like notifications to work (from the user point of view) 15:38:33 Matt_King: Gives +1 to that 15:38:38 How about callingthem AT Whispers? 15:39:39 q? 15:39:43 q- 15:39:44 ack me 15:39:44 jcraig, you wanted to mention notification API usage for out-of-view notifications for lowviz zoom users 15:40:14 jcraig: Include the variants of users that will be using this 15:40:35 ... Nice to have a history of notification. Reading the history of notifications can be very useful. 15:41:00 ... Another strong aspect is that the notification is tied to a particular element 15:41:33 ... this permits the association of bounds. An element out of viewport could handle such a notification differently (since it is offscreen) 15:41:42 q? 15:41:49 ack nicole 15:41:50 ... in general, this underlies that these are AT notifications, not just screen reader notifications 15:42:29 nicole: The focus of the API seems to be on visual changes. What about for a display: none element? 15:42:30 +1 to jcraig about viewport-based awareness for low-vis users 15:42:36 aaronlev: Relevant to that use case 15:43:01 q? 15:43:12 jcraig: Does this deprecate live regions? 15:43:40 Could we have an offensive level of live region too? 15:43:40 aaronlev: (aside: back when we defined 'polite' we also defined 'rude' in live regions) 15:43:57 The pronunciation TF is looking for feedback from platform and AT vendors on two proposed approaches: https://github.com/w3c/pronunciation/wiki/Re:-AT-Vendors 15:44:17 https://github.com/w3c/pronunciation/wiki/Re:-AT-Vendors 15:44:20 Topic: Pronunciation in HTML feedback requested 15:44:52 matatk: The pronunciation TF is looking for feedback from platform and AT vendors on https://github.com/w3c/pronunciation/wiki/Re:-AT-Vendors 15:45:21 ... [1] AT will process pronunciation information from the accessibility tree (AxTree) provided by the browser. 15:45:30 ... [2] AT will parse the SSML-based pronunciation information from the DOM, directly. 15:45:58 q+ 15:45:59 Single-attribute Approach has bene implemented by Texthelp SpeechStream and Pearson TestNav on following URLs, https://www.texthelp.com/en-us/products/speechstream/ 15:46:08 https://home.testnav.com/ 15:47:17 q? 15:47:17 matatk: Note that we are not suggesting that these attributes be applied everywhere; they are meant to help when an author wants to point to correct pronunciation 15:47:20 ack aaronlev 15:47:41 q+ 15:47:54 aaronlev: Large companies like mine will see this as a hard sell, without a clear business case 15:47:56 ack jcraig 15:48:46 jcraig: We see pauses in speech jobs associated with emphasis, for example, is one of the challenges here 15:49:44 ... We do see a trend towards an API supporting some type of, 'for this string, use this IPA (int'l alphabet) string to vocalize' 15:50:55 matatk: We found use cases from education exceeding the use cases from ARIA 15:51:16 ... we feel pronunciation is being handled now, we'd like more visibility to that 15:51:26 q? 15:51:27 jcraig: Some SSML is being used in some settings 15:51:45 ... a lot of variation as the space is complex (browsers, voice engines) 15:51:52 subtopic: blue sky plans 15:52:09 1.3 - 2 major features 15:52:09 * Braille (label and roledescription) 15:52:09 * Annotations (comment, suggestions, mark and multi-id aria-details) 15:52:09 2024 - targetting the following 15:52:09 * aria-actions (secondary actions) 15:52:09 * listview 15:52:09 * notifications (not ARIA ...) 15:52:09 * aria-modal changes for islands of content 15:52:56 s/Topic: Pronunciation in HTML feedback requested/Subtopic: Pronunciation in HTML feedback requested 15:53:29 rrsagent, make minutes 15:53:30 I have made the request to generate https://www.w3.org/2023/09/12-apa-minutes.html Irfan 15:54:26 We care about most things. 15:55:09 q? 15:55:19 jamesn: Reviews the list of proposed ARIA major priority areas 15:57:42 q+ to suggest unicode adoption 15:59:27 subtopic: WAI-Adapt Symbols module, a small handout showing it 16:01:59 q+ to suggest ruby w/unicode (same feedback I gave at the 2019 TPAC in Japan) 16:01:59 matatk: Demonstrates how symbol markup is easily supported by an authoring tool 16:04:17 q+ to also share a new idea... custom font until the unicode implementation happens 16:05:44 jaunita: Do Asian languages, that are based more on symbology, weigh in on this? 16:05:46 ack me 16:05:46 jcraig, you wanted to suggest unicode adoption and to suggest ruby w/unicode (same feedback I gave at the 2019 TPAC in Japan) and to also share a new idea... custom font until the 16:05:50 ... unicode implementation happens 16:07:18 jcraig: I saw a version of this demo Symbols in 2019. 16:07:27 ... Blissymbolics is on its way into Unicode. They need to complete that process to really cement this. 16:07:47 ... this implementation could be worked into a custom CSS font 16:08:17 ... I feel it needs to be in unicode to become universally adopted 16:08:42 matatk: Bliss is making progress into unicode, they are always 'three months away' 16:09:15 ... the missing piece is, at the user-agent side, to take the concept (in this case an attribute, or perhaps as you are proposing a unicode) and map it to different symbol sets 16:10:09 jcraig: To simplify my comment: this might be better handled as a font. 16:10:48 Lionel_Wolberger: Nice idea. One issue: Fonts are not normative. 16:11:04 s/To simplify my comment: this might be better handled as a font./that could be handled as an ARASAAC or Bliss font on the unicode 16:11:16 s/To simplify my comment: this might be better handled as a font./that could be handled as an ARASAAC or Bliss font on the unicode./ 16:11:38 Could we build symbolic annotations with existing Web standards? https://github.com/w3c/adapt/issues/240 16:13:12 RRSAgent, make minutes 16:13:13 I have made the request to generate https://www.w3.org/2023/09/12-apa-minutes.html Roy 16:15:59 rrsagent, make minutes 16:16:00 I have made the request to generate https://www.w3.org/2023/09/12-apa-minutes.html matatk 16:18:53 atomasevich has joined #apa 16:19:02 atomasevich has left #apa 16:49:31 s/Blissymbolics is on its way into Unicode/Bliss was first proposed for Unicode in ~1990, but it's not there yet. Why not? If you want to move forward, you need to clear that roadblock./ 16:51:41 s/this implementation could be worked into a custom CSS font/Unicode in a Ruby line box would be ideal.... In the meantime, you could work it into a custom CSS font as a polyfill and start building support about the Ruby implementation./ 16:53:13 s/I saw a version of this demo Symbols in 2019./I saw a different version of this demo at TPAC in 2019. I gave this same feedback then./ 16:53:25 RRSAgent, make minutes 16:53:26 I have made the request to generate https://www.w3.org/2023/09/12-apa-minutes.html jcraig 16:54:29 s/support about the Ruby implementation/public support as justification for the Unicode+Ruby implementation/ 16:54:30 RRSAgent, make minutes 16:54:32 I have made the request to generate https://www.w3.org/2023/09/12-apa-minutes.html jcraig 17:16:03 naomi has joined #apa 17:49:16 naomi has joined #apa 18:07:42 naomi has joined #apa 18:11:43 Zakim has left #apa 18:19:53 shawn has left #apa 18:30:20 Francis_Storr has joined #apa 18:32:17 naomi has joined #apa 18:49:25 naomi has joined #apa 19:29:32 Matt_King has joined #apa 19:38:27 Francis_Storr has joined #apa 20:06:54 naomi has joined #apa 20:26:30 naomi has joined #apa 20:30:29 matatk has joined #apa 20:30:52 zakim, end meeting 21:23:34 naomi has joined #apa 21:24:31 naomi has joined #apa 21:58:24 naomi has joined #apa 22:26:07 naomi has joined #apa 22:45:23 naomi has joined #apa 23:10:08 kirkwood has joined #APA