Re: Straw man agenda



Hi Willie,

I wonder if we might invite some members of the disability community who are in the Boston area to any of this session. Most specifically the 10-11 demo/overview, and the 11-12 talk on AT gaps for developers & end users. I expect they might also have contributions to make through lunch, and into the 1-3pm End User Setup and Configuration discussion.

Brian - I would be concerned about breaking out into multiple tracks. I think too many of these topics are of interest to too many of us, and doing that would mean lost/diluted impact of those discussions.


Regards,

Peter

Willie:

This agenda looks good, but here are some things I'd like to see more
focus on:

+ There are many a11y components, and it seems like not many people
   understand some of them.  java-access-bridge, the registry daemon,
   etc.  It would be nice to get an overview of how all the components
   fit together, and how to approach mapping a bug to the responsible
   component, and how to debug each component.

+ I think a *lot* of a11y bugs are really the same sort of problems
   that you see over and over again.  Programs that do not have
   accessible labels for widgets, for example.  Perhaps it would be
   useful to pick a few bugs that are examples of the common a11y bugs
   that exist and do an exercise where we demonstrate the bug (how to
   see that the bug exists), and then actually fix the bug.  Probably
   lots of these kinds of bugs are simple 1-line fixes, and if we showed
   people that it is actually easy to identify and fix these sorts of
   bugs (if you know how), then perhaps we would find more community
   involvement in getting these sorts of issues addressed.

I think it would be more useful to have two tracks instead of just one.
One track for people interested in doing development in a11y and
one for people interested in making their application(s) better support
a11y.  I think only people interested in doing active a11y development
would be interested in current a11y gaps.  Probably most people's time
would be better spent helping to get them to understand how to get more
involved with fixing existing bugs, and what they should be doing to
make sure their applications are reasonably accessible.  If we only do
1 track, I think we should minimze the time we spend talking about
future pie-in-the-sky things when there is so much work to do just
getting what already has been implemented to actually work.  I think
this is perhaps the most important thing, and isn't reflected at all
in your 3-bullet breakdown of the day...

 >     * What do we have?
 >     * What do we need?
 >     * How do we get there?

Brian


After consideration of all the suggestions from the community (THANKS!),
I've put together a straw man agenda for the Accessibility Summit for
October 8, 2006, as part of the GNOME Boston 2006 Summit:

    http://live.gnome.org/Boston2006/AccessibilitySummit


The agenda is still up for discussion, so please send your comments.

Thanks!

Will
(Your happy chair)


_______________________________________________
gnome-accessibility-list mailing list
gnome-accessibility-list gnome org
http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-accessibility-list

_______________________________________________
gnome-accessibility-list mailing list
gnome-accessibility-list gnome org
http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-accessibility-list




[Date Prev][Date Next]   [Thread Prev][Thread Next]   [Thread Index] [Date Index] [Author Index]