July 7, 2010
Today the Linux Foundation announced that it was releasing IAccessible2 with new licensing terms. IA2 is now available with a BSD license. You can read about this change as well as the additional tools available at http://www.linuxfoundation.org/news-media/announcements/2010/07/linux-foundation-delivers-new-licensing-terms-testing-tools-accessi. This is an important change as Adobe works to integrate IA2 into a future version of Adobe Acrobat and Reader, as well as the Flash Player and AIR.
March 31, 2010
As promised, we’ve posted the slides from the Adobe talks at CSUN.
Adobe Accessibility Talks at CSUN 2010
| Talk Title |
File types Available |
| Accessibility Support for Designers in Adobe Creative Suite |
PDF PPT |
| Access to PDF: Developments in Support of Assistive Technology with Adobe Acrobat |
PDF |
| Accessible eBooks, ePub, DAISY, and Adobe |
PDF PPTX |
| Accessible Web Conferencing Update |
PDF PPTX |
| Adobe Flex and Adobe AIR for Accessible Rich Internet Applications |
PDF PPTX |
| Assistive Technology Access to Adobe Flash and PDF |
PDF PPT |
| Understanding the End User Role in PDF Accessibility (with AFB Consulting) |
PDF PPT |
| PDF Accessibility – Best Practices for Authoring |
PDF PPT |
| Video Accessibility for Deaf and Hard of Hearing Users in Adobe Flash |
PDF PPTX |
November 18, 2009
The AIR 2 beta went live on Adobe Labs yesterday, and it includes support for MSAA to allow assistive technologies on the Windows platform to access Flash-based content within AIR applications.
We are still doing testing and addressing issues, but encourage you to try it out. The beta runtime installer is available at http://labs.adobe.com/technologies/air2/.
For any readers who aren’t familiar with AIR, what you are installing is not a developer tool but the runtime that is used to run AIR applications that developers create. There are many applications that are developed as AIR applications and this is underlying technology that allows those applications to be displayed on your system. So what does the addition of accessibility support mean for users with disabilities? For blind or low-vision users, this means that content that is developed with accessibility in mind will be able to interact with the applications using assistive technologies that they already use.
Will all AIR applications now be accessible? No, no more than all HTML websites or all C++ or Java applications are – but what this does mean is that developers now have the capability to address accessibility in their applications. With previous versions of AIR a developer could ignore accessibility for blind and some low-vision users because the information wouldn’t reach the assistive technologies, but now with AIR 2 it does.
My colleague Daniel Koestler published a post on AIR accessibility yesterday, and he includes a link to an application that he developed with accessibility in mind that you can download and try.
Please give AIR 2 a try and let us know about your experiences.
September 23, 2009
I spoke at the RNIB’s Techshare conference in London last week. The topic was Rich Internet Applications with Flash, Flex, and AIR. The talk was geared to a tech-savvy consumer audience, so was light on coding specifics but highlights the key high-level messages about Flash, Flex, and AIR. If you are interested, take a few minutes to view the presentation and let me know if you have comments.