sIFR does not break aural readers at all.
It takes normal HTML and it pushes it into a flash movie (if flash is there)
and shows it with the flash font.  Still selectable, copyable.  The user
actually can not tell the difference at all.  Screen readers read the html,
not the flash.  Its unobtrusive.  Google 'sifr" and see if it fails any of
your tests.

I think you are assuming that anything at all would break.  I am assuming,
nothing would break.

Glen




On 7/30/07, Christof Donat <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
> Hi,
>
> > 1. Allow the publisher to determine which rendering engine to display
> the
> > page in.
>
> Exactly this is what I don't whant to see and I do think that I have good
> reasons.
>
> > Think about sIFR.  It works because it's unobtrusive and relies on a
> plugin
> > that everyone has.
>
> Well, most people. How does the flash player work for aural platforms? How
> good ist in on a Braille display?
>
> > Its surprising to me how immediately everyone is saying, "bad idea".  Is
> > sIFR a bad idea?
>
> Interesting how perception varies. I have had the impression that
> everybody
> but me likes this idea ;-)
>
> Christof
>

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