This article is for those who are new to ARIA. You need an understanding of HTML and the potential difficulties that people with disabilities can face using the Web. It is useful to be familiar with some Rich Internet Applications from a user's perspectiveAfter reading this article, you'll understand what ARIA is for, how to integrate it into your sites, and how you can use it now to make even the simplest of sites more accessible.
Lemon, Gez. Opera (2008). Articles>Web Design>Accessibility>Flash
Captions for Video with Flash CS3 (Part Two)
In this article, we’re going to look at a method of captioning a Flash video file: embedding the XML directly into the FLV file. In very simple terms, the XML document will contain the cue points for the captions. When one of those cue points is reached, the caption appears over the video.
Green, Tom. Digital Web Magazine (2007). Articles>Web Design>Accessibility>Flash
Captions for Video with Flash CS3
In the exercise that follows, and in the second part of this series, we are going to add captions, using both methods, to the same video. For those passionate about web standards, the first method involves the use of Timed Text captions. If you go this route, you need to follow the standard laid out by the W3C. There is a lot to it but, in a nutshell, it requires you to create a specific type of XML document using the required tags.
Green, Tom. Digital Web Magazine (2007). Articles>Web Design>Accessibility>Flash
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