Spoken Presentation Task Force of the APA WG
Announcements
No announcements at the moment.
Spoken Presentation Overview
Spoken Presentation Overview provides an overview of the overall pronunciation technique in W3C.
Spoken Presentation Video
There is also a short pronunciation technical video available, it shows the demo of pronunciation technical and approaches for controlling pronunciation in spans of web content where uniform markup can make the difference.
Meetings and Communication
The APA WG conducts its work using a variety of synchronous and asynchronous tools:
- Teleconferences of the Spoken Presentation Task Force;
- Face to face meetings (The Task Force will plan a face-to-face meeting at a later stage.);
- Email lists;
- IRC discussion on the #pronunciation IRCchannel, used largely for minute-taking;
- Spoken Presentation source repository;
- Wiki;
- Web-Based Surveys (WBS);
- Spoken Presentation Issue Tracker;
- Spoken Presentation source repository issue tracker;
- Current participants in the Spoken Presentation Task Force.
These tools are used by participants of the Task Force. For ways non-participants can contribute, see how to contribute to the Working Group and file comments.
Teleconferences
Spoken Presentation Task Force meetings: Mondays at 11:00 until 12:00 Boston time.
Meeting Minutes
Minutes from previous meetings are available.
Mailing Lists
The Spoken Presentation Task Force uses the [email protected] mailing list (mailing list archives) for email discussion. Participants are automatically added to the mailing list when they become a participant of the Task Force.
Current Work
See the wiki for current planning and draft documents.
Publications
- Explainer: Improving Spoken Presentation on the Web provides an overview of the work. It:
- Briefly introduces the context for W3C work on pronunciation
- Describes the advantages and disadvantages of two approaches
- Poses questions for additional input
- Pronunciation User Scenarios provides examples of:
- End-users, including screen reader users
- Content providers, including educators
- Software developers, including content managements systems
- Pronunciation Gap Analysis and Use Cases provides details on the analysis. It:
- Provides more detailed context
- Describes required features for pronunciation and spoken presentation
- Describes specific implementation approaches for introducing presentation authoring markup into HTML5 (called “use cases”)
- Provides a gap analysis
- Describes how the required features may be met by existing approaches
How to Comment, Contribute, and Participate
To join the Spoken Presentation Task Force, individuals must be participants of the APA WG. Participants are expected to actively contribute to the work of the Task Force. If you are interested in participating in the Spoken Presentation Task Force, please send e-mail to: Janina Sajka, Irfan Ali and Paul Grenier and include a little bit about what you’re interested in and how you think that you may be able to contribute to the Task Force. Then follow the APA Working Group participation procedures to join the Working Group, and once you have joined ask Ruoxi(Roy) Ran to add you to the task force.
To contribute without joining the task force, see the APA Working Group contribute page for general instructions. To contribute to documents under development, see how to contribute to the source repository directly.
Current participants in the Spoken Presentation Task Force.
Administrative Information
The Spoken Presentation Task Force is a Task Force of the Accessible Platform Architectures (APA) Working Group. It assists these Working Groups to produce techniques, understanding, and guidance documents, as well as updates to existing related W3C material that addresses the cognitive space.
Facilitator and Contacts
- Task Force facilitator: Irfan Ali, Paul Grenier
- Staff Contact: Ruoxi(Roy) Ran
Work Statement
The Spoken Presentation Accessibility Task Force Work Statement defines the initial objective, scope, approach, and participation of the Task Force.
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