Webkit as I understand it unlrunderlies Safari code and not Chrome,
though I would be happy to be corrected.
I don't quite understand why people are not seeing the obvious problem
with the latest Google Chrome as it is pretty clear it has been badly
broken since the last update, and is unusable with Voiceover now using
default dom view. .
Basically for example if you go to www.bbc.co.uk/news you will now find
it is impossible to read any news content with Voiceover using dom view.
You can only read element like headings etc. by tedious pressing of the
tab button with no ability to read any actual news content.
If you turn Chrome Vox on then the news content does become readable
with that alternative screen reader but the previous accessibility which
used to be possible with Voiceover has been broken.
There is a sort of workaround if you are comfortable switching to Groups
rather than dom mode of web navigation. Mysteriously then some text of
web pages does become accessible to Voiceover but groups mode is not the
most intuitive of interfaces.
Hopefully either accessibil...@apple.com and/or accessibil...@google.com
can sort something out which can help these difficulties.
It would be nice if for once Google was proactive in its accessibility
testing rather than reacting to the problems which so called "updates"
create.
David Griffith
On 31/01/2015 16:17, Travis Siegel wrote:
Oh, this is normal, it's likely a result of changes in webkit (the browser code
most osx browsers use to render their content).
When I was using leopard, there were several web pages that rendered just fine.
Upon upgrading to snowleopard, many of these sites got modified to use tables
instead. This is not a good thing in my opinion, because it takes more
interacting, less control over what gets read, and more navigational commands
to get through the pages. Needless to say, I wasn't happy.
Unfortunately, my imac isn't new enough to upgrade any further, so I'm stuck
until I can obtain a newer mac. Perhaps your issues are similarly related.
On Jan 29, 2015, at 11:46 PM, Bryan Jones wrote:
Can you provide some more details so we can try to reproduce what you are
finding? For example, can you provide links to some websites where you are
experiencing these “collapsed things,” and maybe describe the differences
between how you used to be able to read the pages more easily and how it is
different now?
On Jan 29, 2015, at 11:04 PM, Lovette Yewchan <lyewc...@telus.net> wrote:
One thing I am noticing is that there are a lot of collapsed things and I
cannot read the pages as easily as before.
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