Test Center Tracker: California’s vision for an accessible Web, Microsoft’s blunted run at Flash

analysis
Oct 4, 20072 mins

Opening the Web to everyone: The state of California has taken the long overdue step of enforcing Web site accessibility requirements. Developers, dev tool vendors, content creators and on-line advertisers should be making accessibility a priority if for no other reason than the substantial market they're turning away. Some software companies, like Apple and Adobe, get it. Apple added support for captions to Qu

Opening the Web to everyone: The state of California has taken the long overdue step of enforcing Web site accessibility requirements. Developers, dev tool vendors, content creators and on-line advertisers should be making accessibility a priority if for no other reason than the substantial market they’re turning away. Some software companies, like Apple and Adobe, get it. Apple added support for captions to QuickTime, and Adobe’s Web authoring tools check for accessibility standards adherence. Perhaps this judicial nudge will make accessibility core of the next-generation Web.

Sorry, Microsoft, but Flash already has its AIR apparent: Martin Heller’s review of Microsoft Silverlight details Microsoft’s .net-based rich Web client framework. It’s packaged as a rather fat native code plug-in for Windows and OS X browsers. Looked at in a vacuum, Silverlight is nice, and it demos smashingly well, but Microsoft is bringing a plug-in and unfamiliar tools to developers and content creators, while Adobe is expanding its Flash ecosystem with its own Internet run-time framework, AIR. The cross-platform ubiquity of Flash, a worldwide community of skilled developers, a well-established toolsuite and legitimate (read that: beyond lip service) engagement in open source will net Adobe the crown in rich Web apps when AIR debuts in Q1 ’08. If Silverlight amounts to little more than a wedge that carries Windows Media Player and .net+HTML to Intel-based Macs, that’s a win for Microsoft and for Mac users. But there’s no need to hope for a Flash killer; Flash just needs to be opened and evolved. Adobe’s on that.

Here’s a bit of parting-shot trivia for non-developers: What’s Adobe’s little-acknowledged high card in the rich Web app game? JavaScript.