assistive-technology: Difference between revisions

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<h1>assistive technology</h1>
<h1>assistive technology</h1>


This page is for documenting currently known [[accessibility]] assistive technologies (implementations) that are being used in the wild for the purpose of testing any particular microformats and microformats techniques to determine their impact on assistive technologies.
This page is for documenting currently known [[accessibility]] assistive technologies (implementations) that are being used in the wild for the purpose of testing any particular microformats and microformats techniques to determine their impact on assistive technologies.


In addition, by keep tracking of various different assistive technologies, their versions, their bugs, and any non-standards-compliant behavior, especially when such behavior interferes with microformats on the page, we can focus our efforts on suggesting improvements for them accordingly.
__TOC__
 
== What to add ==
 
=== Only accessible assistive technologies ===
Rather than duplicating lists elsewhere on the Web (e.g. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_screen_readers Wikipedia's Comparison of screen readers]), please only add assistive technologies that you, or someone you know (such as a user of an assistive technology that you are in touch with) has access to for testing purposes.  This will help keep the testing "real world" on an ongoing basis, because if no one has access to an assistive technology, then testing it is an unreasonable (purely theoretical) expectation.


When adding an assistive technology to the list(s) below, please provide a name, URL to home page if available, version number, when published, and estimated number of users if known (even rough estimates are ok).
=== Please provide ===
When adding an assistive technology to the list(s) below, please provide:
* Your name / name of person who has access to the assistive technology for testing purposes
* Name of assistive technology
* URL to home page for the technology, and URL(s) to purchase if available
* version number
* when published/released
* estimated number of users if known (even rough estimates are ok), along with date of estimate (ideally with a citation).


__TOC__
=== Note their bugs too ===
In addition, by keep tracking of various different assistive technologies, their versions, their bugs/shortcomings, and any non-standards-compliant behavior, especially when such behavior interferes with microformats on the page, we can focus our efforts on suggesting improvements for them accordingly.


== Screen Readers ==
== Screen Readers ==

Revision as of 00:32, 30 April 2007

assistive technology

This page is for documenting currently known accessibility assistive technologies (implementations) that are being used in the wild for the purpose of testing any particular microformats and microformats techniques to determine their impact on assistive technologies.

What to add

Only accessible assistive technologies

Rather than duplicating lists elsewhere on the Web (e.g. Wikipedia's Comparison of screen readers), please only add assistive technologies that you, or someone you know (such as a user of an assistive technology that you are in touch with) has access to for testing purposes. This will help keep the testing "real world" on an ongoing basis, because if no one has access to an assistive technology, then testing it is an unreasonable (purely theoretical) expectation.

Please provide

When adding an assistive technology to the list(s) below, please provide:

  • Your name / name of person who has access to the assistive technology for testing purposes
  • Name of assistive technology
  • URL to home page for the technology, and URL(s) to purchase if available
  • version number
  • when published/released
  • estimated number of users if known (even rough estimates are ok), along with date of estimate (ideally with a citation).

Note their bugs too

In addition, by keep tracking of various different assistive technologies, their versions, their bugs/shortcomings, and any non-standards-compliant behavior, especially when such behavior interferes with microformats on the page, we can focus our efforts on suggesting improvements for them accordingly.

Screen Readers

  • JAWS latest version ????, published ????, ???? users.
  • ...

See Also