![]() ![]() Promoted by an association named “Paideia” (“Education” in greek), the aim is to to promote tailor made digital objects for the dissemination of Augmentative and Alternative Communication (AAC). The second project is called Libri per tutti (“Books for everyone” in italian). Screenshot 3: contextual menu with accessibility options Case study 2: accessibility for autism All is tied by the webview’s local storage, which retains the preferred options triggered by the user/reader. And a toolbar with buttons capable of interpreting and toggle styles and multimedia according to the specifications of that profile. Technically speaking, this is possible through a combination of two factors: a pre-ingestion manipulation of the text (here is where a pool of experts, leaded by Mobidys, comes in) with a specific html and CSS tagging profile. For instance: highlighting text, highlighting syllabus, dark and light mode on text, letter-spacing, and much more. The menu is always accessible and allows users to trigger a number of text and audio manipulations, according to the kind and quality of the cognitive disorder (see screenshots). They all have a built-in menu that triggers an adaptive content for various cognitive disorders, with a particular focus on dyslexia. They have a collection of specially designed children’s illustrated books. The initiative comes from Mobidys, a french company specialized in accessibility solutions, in partnership with French publisher Nathan. “100% accessible” ebook (I am quoting from the blog’s presentation,). The first project is called FROG – which stands for FRee cOGnitive ebook, i.e. Let me introduce here two specific and concrete case histories, two projects we have been working as a team, in PubCoder, in the last couple of years. ![]() What counts, and this is the key point here, is how children with special needs can take advantage from EPUB3 fixed-layout – in an unconventional and non-standard way maybe, but equally important: for people’s lives, of their families and, generally speaking, for a society that believes in ethical values such as inclusiveness.Ĭhildren with special needs can take advantage from EPUB3 fixed-layout ![]() That my popularity – and the software’s – will continue to remain low within standard organizations, doesn’t matter. I do not intend to discuss these arguments, with which I in fact totally agree. Semantics Bad habits in FXL seem to drive authoring software to present a collection of meaningless s, quite meaningless to any assistive technology.No declarative assertion is provided in order to understand what is happening on the page. Interactivity Javascript is a black box.All tools associated with creating FXL ebooks to provide correct reading order. Reading order In FXL it is author-driven and not device-oriented.There are several good arguments for this prejudice. I was told on that occasion – and not for the first time – how bad the FXL format is for accessibility. Give fixed-layout a chance, children love it There was outraged silence when I made it clear that PubCoder exports FIXED-LAYOUT only. Well, once I started speaking I suddenly realised that nobody knew one key piece of information about the software, which undermined its popularity among this audience. People seemed very keen to listen about the software, as one of the few EPUB3 authoring tools out there. A couple of years ago I was invited to a round table with the Publisher’s Italian Association to introduce our software solution PubCoder to some members of the IDPF and DAISY Consortium, the organization committed to accessibility as founder member of the IDPF itself. ![]()
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