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My Mozilla 24 Wrap
Returned from Tokyo yesterday after a whirlwind tour… Alex Polvi and I pulled some “almost-all-nighters” working on fun projects and participating in Mozilla 24.
To see all the moving parts of Mozilla 24 happening at once, and to witness the amazing teams in Japan, Thailand, Paris, and Stanford all working tirelessly to pull off this event was both awesome and exhausting and so much more. Repeatedly, I would get IMs, emails, IRCs (is that a term?) mentioning what a creative and interesting event it was while 24 was taking place. Messages came to me from India, Germany, U.S., France, Japan — all remarking on the coolness of what was going on. I believe we have to give a big “congratulatory-blog-on-the-back” to Chibi, Kaori, Gen, Kohei, Masayuki, Eiko, Shimono, and all the tons of others who made this idea a reality.
I took part by organizing the accessibility track, as mentioned in my last post. Pretty much, it happened with relatively few snags. From my location at Keio University in Tokyo, we were using Skype to dial into a conference call that I had set up for all the panelists to dial into so we could have a live phone conversation. Skype dropped our call once in the middle of Tim Keenan’s presentation. Aside from that, everything else seemed to go pretty well. If you are in my timezone in California and did not get up at 4:50 AM to watch our discussion, here are all the presentations (or as much as I can provide):
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- Video presentation by Dr. Nagarjuna G and Krishnakant Mane from the Homi Bhabha Centre in Mumbai
- Video presentation about Access Firefox by Ken Saunders
- Aaron Leventhal’s presentation: Aaron L’s Moz 24 presentation
- Tim Keenan’s three links about Mozilla’s QA for accessibility:
- Mozilla’s Accessibility QA Home wiki page
- UI Accessibility Test Plan
- Sample bug that highlights tools used by accessibility testers and developers (namely Accevents, see comment 5 by Tim)
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What were some outcomes of this session?
First of all, it was definitely nice to get a few of the players in the Mozilla accessibility world together for a session. I think having each person chat about their specialties was very valuable. A lot of praise and congratulations were exchanged, and I believe this is pretty valuable.
Secondly, I think we found some developers or contributors in Japan who might be willing to work on some Japanese-based accessibility issues.
Third, the team of panelists has already started planning for future events, including an accessibility hack fest in October and a game plan for participation at the annual CSUN conference.
If you viewed the accessibility track online (thank you!!! I know it was 4:50 AM in California…), then please comment on what you thought. It was exciting to be a part of and congrats and thank you to all of the panelists. They were terrific.
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