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Workshop 3 Accessible Multimedia

Join our workshop to learn about creating accessible web content, including basics of web accessibility, coding an accessible website, and making multimedia content accessible. The workshop will cover accessibility issues for audio, video, JavaScript, Flash, Java applets, online conferencing, and PDFs. We will discuss the importance of making information available to all users and provide tips on adding alternative presentations of content to increase accessibility.

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Workshop 3 Accessible Multimedia

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  1. Workshop 3Accessible Multimedia Web Content Accessibility Project Funded by BCcampus Natasha Boskic, Kirsten Bole, Nathan Hapke University of British Columbia

  2. Workshop schedule • Monday August 21Basics of Web Accessibility • Tuesday August 22Coding an Accessible Website • Wednesday August 23Accessible Multimedia • Thursday August 24Creating Usable Content • Friday August 25Disabilities & Assistive Technology

  3. The Plan • Discuss accessibility issues of the following types of media: • Audio • Video • JavaScript • Flash • Java Applets • Online conferencing • PDF

  4. The Golden Rule • Make all the information available to all users • The media itself can’t always be made accessible • Adding different presentation of content increases accessibility!

  5. Audio • Alternative for spoken word can be as simple as a transcript • For music, lyrics • If more complex, consider providing a description of why the audio is significant and/or important

  6. Video • Good news • Great for those with cognitive disabilities • Problem areas: • Visual impairment • Audio Description • Aural impairment • Transcripts/Subtitles/Captions

  7. Audio Description • Narrated information about the visuals • Tell non-sighted users what the audio soundtrack does not • Example: “Family walking in the Rose Garden” • aka Described Video

  8. Captioning & Subtitling • Subtitles: What was said • Captions: What was heard • Subtitles, plus other aural cues • E.g.: Knock on Door, Phone Ringing • Open Captions • Captions directly ingrained into video • Closed Captions

  9. Closed Captioning • Captions provided separate from video • User must have capable player • For online video: W3C’s SMIL technology • RealPlayer • Ambulant • Since July 1993, 13”+ Televisions have built in CC Decoder by law

  10. Video: The Hard Part • Provide enough information so your audience knows what is happening • … but don’t overwhelm them! • Tell the viewer that the people are in the Rose Garden if it affects the meaning of the video • Don’t tell the viewer if a plane happens to fly by (unrelated to the scene) • Same for captioning

  11. JavaScript • WCAG requires that web applications be usable without JavaScript • Some screen readers completely ignore • Some users disable JavaScript • JAWS relies on Internet Explorer to render JavaScript actions • But JAWS isn’t able to tell the user about changes to the page made by JavaScript

  12. Flash • Great for those with cognitive disabilities • Interactive demos can often explain better than text • Screen readers can interpret if the flash video is made correctly • “alternative text” on buttons etc. • Ensure reading order makes sense • Ensure user can navigate with keyboard • Use flash for interactive content, not your whole site!

  13. Java Applets • Same issues as Flash • Reading order • Keyboard navigation • Plain text (not graphical) • Java works (slightly) differently on PC/Mac, test both

  14. Conferencing • (Horizon Wimba Live Classroom, Elluminate Live) • Slides get converted to graphical format • Can provide slide descriptions • Can also provide closed captioning

  15. PDF: Portable Document Format • Good: Text is correctly handled by screen readers • Bad: Users must launch external viewer • Use tags to specify: • Alternative text on images • Headings • etc.

  16. PDF: Tricks of the Trade • Make sure text is textual (not graphical) • Use Optical Character Recognition (OCR) if scanning a document • Ensure search tool works • Google the URL • Output is similar to what A.T. can interpret • Acrobat has a built in screen reader!

  17. PDF: Correct Usage • Use PDF only when you need functionality you can’t get from HTML: • “Enhanced” Forms • Documents for print • E.g.: Order forms • Strict multi-columnar • E.g.: Academic Articles • Special notation

  18. Resources • http://www.adobe.com/accessibility/ • http://www.adobe.com/enterprise/accessibility/pdfs/acro7_pg_ue.pdf • http://www.alistapart.com/articles/ pdf_accessibility/ • http://www.w3.org/AudioVideo/

  19. Thank you for coming! • Join us tomorrow for Creating Usable Content- 12 pm PST • Natasha Boskic (natasha.boskic@ubc.ca) • Kirsten Bole (kirsten.bole@ubc.ca) • Nathan Hapke (nhapke@interchange.ubc.ca)

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