RE: Firefox 4 preview and ARIA report from CSUN

  • From: "Ken Perry" <whistler@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <programmingblind@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Sun, 20 Mar 2011 00:42:52 -0400

I was not clear in my statement but my understanding was that they were to
be combined so that it was dead or are they keeping them separate.  I sure
don't want to have to read two standards if one has everything in it.

Ken

-----Original Message-----
From: programmingblind-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:programmingblind-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Sina Bahram
Sent: Sunday, March 20, 2011 12:21 AM
To: programmingblind@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: RE: Firefox 4 preview and ARIA report from CSUN

Ken, ARIA is part of HTML5, which is to say part of HTML, since W3C has
removed the 5.

ARIA is actually about to be ratified in 1.0 form, and 1.1 is already
coming, having spoken to the chair of about this personally.

Nothing can be farther from dyeing.

Take care,
Sina

-----Original Message-----
From: programmingblind-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:programmingblind-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Ken Perry
Sent: Saturday, March 19, 2011 8:36 PM
To: programmingblind@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: RE: Firefox 4 preview and ARIA report from CSUN

mm far as I know Aria is really a dieing standard because of html5 isn't it?

Ken 

-----Original Message-----
From: programmingblind-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:programmingblind-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Jamal Mazrui
Sent: Saturday, March 19, 2011 7:26 PM
To: programmingblind@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: Firefox 4 preview and ARIA report from CSUN

Also, another conference take-away for me was that Orca support for the 
WAI-ARIA standard is a long way off, unfortunately.

Jamal


On 3/19/2011 7:23 PM, Jamal Mazrui wrote:
> I am forwarding an article I got from the blind-mozilla list about
> Firefox 4. It does not address accessibility specifically, but offers
> some interesting comparative information about competing browsers today.
>
> This topic also made me think about the ARIA-related sessions I attended
> last week at CSUN, and I thought that some of you who were not able to
> attend, yourselves, may be interested in a report. For whatever it's
> worth, there seemed to be a consensus among experts in WAI-ARIA (the
> ARIA accessibility standard of the W3C, which is currently a candidate
> recommendation) that the latest JAWS and NVDA provide the best screen
> reader support for ARIA apps at this time. Companies doing a lot in this
> space with attention to accessibility include IBM and Adobe. WebAIM
> includes much nonprofit expertise in this area.
>
> Jamal
>
> -------- Forwarded Message --------
> Subject: [blind-mozilla] Firefox 4 to debut on March 22nd and looks
> mighty impressive!
> Date: Fri, 18 Mar 2011 11:35:01 +0000
> From: chris hallsworth <christopherh40@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> Reply-To: blind-mozilla@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> To: blind-mozilla@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>
>
>
> *10 Things to Drool Over in Firefox 4
> PC World
>
> ? Thu Mar 17, 5:54 pm ET
>
> Mozilla's Firefox 4 is now officially expected to debut on Tuesday March
> 22, following hard on the heels of Google's Chrome 10 and Microsoft's
> Internet Explorer 9.
>
> With so many new browser releases coming out in such rapid succession,
> it stands to reason that at least some users are going to need some help
> figuring out which now works best for them.
>
> Toward that end, I had a chat earlier today with Johnathan Nightingale,
> Mozilla's director of Firefox development, to get a sense of what the
> final release of Firefox 4 will bring. Here are some of the highlights
> of what we can expect.
>
> 1. More Speed
>
> With its new JägerMonkey JavaScript engine, Firefox 4 delivers huge
> performance enhancements, Nightingale told me, including faster startup
> times, graphics rendering and page loads. In fact, in performance tests
> on the Kraken, SunSpider and V8 benchmarks, for example, Firefox 4 blew
> away previous versions of the browser, with performance results between
> three and six times better.
>
> Firefox 4 also outdid Chrome 10, Opera 11.1 and Internet Explorer 9 in
> the Kraken benchmark, as GigaOM recently noted. Bottom line: It's
> blazingly fast.
>
> 2. Less Clutter
>
> Tabs are now given top visual priority in Firefox 4 so as to enable more
> efficient and intuitive browsing. In addition to its new "tabs on top"
> layout, however, the software now also offers a number of other features
> to make it simpler and more streamlined.
>
> A Switch to Tab feature, for instance, helps reduce tab clutter by
> automatically calling up an already-tabbed URL rather than duplicating
> it all over again. "It took my tab list from 80 to 90 down to 50 or 60,"
> Nightingale said.
>
> "The slowest part of browsing is often the user," he explained. "If you
> have 200 tabs open and you can't find the right one, that's the slow
part."
>
> Then, too, there are App Tabs, which allow the user to take sites they
> always have open--such as Gmail or Twitter--off the tab bar and give
> them a permanent home in the browser. Then, no matter where the user
> visits, those tabs are always visible on the browser's left-hand edge.
> Not only that, but each App Tab's icon glows to indicate when there's
> been activity on that site, such as new mail coming in.
>
> When Firefox gets reloaded, it boosts loading speed by focusing first on
> the active page and App Tabs, and then loading other tabs in gradual
> succession after that, Nightingale explained.
>
> Further reducing clutter is Firefox 4's Firefox Button, meanwhile, which
> displays all menu items in a single button for easy access.
>
> 3. Panorama
>
> Though it began as an add-on, Firefox 4's new Panorama feature is
> another one designed to battle tab clutter. Using it, Web surfers can
> drag and drop their tabs into manageable groups that can be organized,
> named and arranged intuitively and visually.
>
> In previous versions of the browser, users with 20 tabs, for example,
> didn't have an easy way to separate out the ones that were related.
> "Some people would put tabs in different windows, but that just moves
> the clutter," Nightingale explained.
>
> Panorama, on the other hand, now provides a visual canvas on which tabs
> can be logically organized into groups representing work, home, hobbies
> or research, for example.
>
> 4. Sync
>
> Another new feature that started life as an add-on is Sync, which
> synchronizes an individual's multiple copies of Firefox across various
> platforms. So, a user might look up directions to a restaurant from
> their work computer, for example, and then be able to easily find and
> pull down those same directions from their Android phone on the road,
> Nightingale explained.
>
> "Wherever you are, Firefox knows you," he added. "It gives you so much
> freedom."
>
> For privacy, all such information is bundled on the user's local machine
> and encrypted before it goes onto the network, he added.
>
> 5. Do Not Track
>
> With a single check box, Firefox 4 users can ensure that any time the
> browser requests a Web page, it will send along a header specifying that
> the user does not want their browsing behavior to be tracked.
>
> In theory, advertisers and Web sites could disregard such requests,
> Nightingale noted--as they could equivalent mechanisms in other browsers
> as well. On the other hand, enforcing them is not a technical problem,
> he noted. "It's a matter of trust--enforcing on the technical side
> doesn't help."
>
> What Nightingale hopes is that advertisers and Web sites will use the
> new capability as an opportunity to show respect for consumers' wishes
> and to demonstrate leadership when it comes to privacy. In beta versions
> of the software, he noted, most wanted to learn more about how to comply
> and get involved.
>
> "I'm keen to see how ad networks and content sites respond," Nightingale
> concluded. With the new technology enabled, "everyone you're interacting
> with knows your intent."
>
> 6. Under the Hood
>
> A number of other features--some visible to users, others not--will also
> appear in Firefox 4, including support for the WebM format for
> HD-quality video; 3D graphics via WebGL; elegant animations through the
> use of CSS3; and multitouch support.
>
> Then, too, there's super-fast graphics acceleration with Direct2D and
> Direct3D on Windows, XRender on Linux, and OpenGL on Mac enabled by
> default on supported hardware.
>
> 7. Improved Security
>
> With HTTP Strict Transport Security, or HSTS, sites can now make sure
> information is always encrypted, thereby preventing attackers from
> intercepting sensitive data. Previously, a hacker sitting in a Starbucks
> store, for example, could potentially watch Web surfers enter a bank's
> home page, which is not encrypted, and hijack them from there,
> Nightingale noted.
>
> With Content Security Policy, or CSP, meanwhile, Firefox 4 ensures that
> cross-site scripting attacks can't infect a site such as through its
> comments section, he added.
>
> I should also note that because Firefox's code is open, it's not subject
> to any vendor's preset patch schedule. Rather, its security is
> constantly being reviewed and improved.
>
> 8. HTML5
>
> Firefox 4's new HTML5 parser and full support for Web video, audio, drag
> & drop, and file handling mean that it's capable of supporting the
> latest Web environments.
>
> 9. Multiplatform Support
>
> Whereas Microsoft's IE9 can be used only on Windows--and only Vista and
> Windows 7 at that--Firefox, as always, is multiplatform. So, whether
> you're on Windows, Linux or a Mac, you can enjoy its powerful new
features.
>
> 10. The Community Touch
>
> Last but not least, whereas proprietary browsers such as IE9 are
> developed by Microsoft's team of paid developers to reflect their own
> vision of what users want, Firefox has been shaped significantly by the
> people who use it. In fact, between 30 percent and 40 percent of its
> code was developed by the community, Nightingale told me. It's hard to
> imagine a better way to make sure a product delivers what users want.
>
> With so many exciting new capabilities, Firefox users have a lot to look
> forward to in this new release. So, for that matter, do the legions of
> Internet Explorer users who will sooner or later make the switch.
>
> Follow Katherine Noyes on Twitter: @Noyesk.
>
> *
>
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