Techniques for Authoring Tool Accessibility - (W3C Note as of 2002-07-20) example techniques and references to further information, as an informative aid to developers seeking to implement the Authoring Tool Accessibility Guidelines
Authoring Tool Accessibility Guidelines "Wombat" - (W3C Working Draft as of 2002-07-20) for developers who wish to design authoring tools that produce accessible Web content and who wish to create accessible authoring interfaces, may eventually supersede the W3C Recommendation Authoring Tool Accessibility Guidelines 1.0
Device Independence Principles - (W3C Working Draft as of 2002-07-20) describes principles for greater device independence for Web content and applications
Semantic Interpretation for Speech Recognition - (W3C Working Draft as of 2002-07-20) defines the process of Semantic Interpretation for Speech Recognition and the syntax and semantics of semantic interpretation tags that can be added to speech recognition grammars to compute information to return to an application on the basis of rules and tokens that were matched by the speech recognizer
Speech Recognition Grammar Specification Version 1.0 - (W3C Candidate Recommendation as of 2002-07-20) defines syntax for representing grammars for use in speech recognition so that developers can specify the words and patterns of words to be listened for by a speech recognizer
User Agent Accessibility Guidelines, Version 1.0 - (W3C Working Draft as of 2002-09-04) guidelines for designing user agents that lower barriers to Web accessibility for people with visual, hearing, physical, and cognitive disabilities
Techniques for User Agent Accessibility Guidelines, Version 1.0 - (W3C Working Draft as of 2002-09-04) companion to User Agent Accessibility Guidelines, and covers the accessibility of user interfaces, content rendering, application programming interfaces (APIs), and languages such as HTML, CSS, and SMIL
Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 2.0 - (W3C Working Draft as of 2002-09-04) incorporating feedback on WCAG 1.0, this document attempts to apply checkpoints to a wider range of technologies and to use wording that may be understood by a more varied audience