Re: Forming an Accessibility Steering Committee



Hi Will,

Looks good. Two indirectly related things came to mind as I read your email. Can we:

1) create an IRC channel for more interactive discussions about gnome-a11y (or linux-a11y, or unix-a11y, or foss-a11y) 2) be mindful of potential KDE resources (harmonization). Maybe some stuff belongs on GNOME, and potentially other stuff belongs in a more shared space? 3) decide if this is to look slick, or be more developer-ish (see ramble below).

I agree with Steve that we should consider Clinicians for the public face, but I'm doubtful a live.gnome.org page can ever looked polished enough. If we want to send the message that GNOME A11y is for real... the "look" of the site will be the first impression. I think http://live.gnome.org/Orca is one of the better pages on the wiki, but it does have more noise than is ideal (compare with http://www.mozilla.com/). I know we don't have the same resources as MoCo... but this is just for illustration. Yeah, I know the GOK page sucks... although GOK needs tender loving care before I would call it polished enough, so I wouldn't want to mislead ;)

Of course I'm hoping one thing the a11y committee/group can help keep tabs on (steer) is making sure we have an awesome alt-input roadmap with resources behind it. This will likely involve liaise with Sun and Mozilla.

cheers,
David

Willie Walker wrote:
Hi All:

Before I invest a lot of effort into getting things going on the WIKI, I wanted to pass some ideas by everyone.

I'm thinking that we want the work and impact of the committee to be very transparent. In addition, we want to avoid duplication of information as much as possible. This will also tend to be tightly coupled with the WIKI refactor, which might be one of the first things we want to get done.

So...let's try to work out what we want the GNOME A11y WIKI to look like. I'll start with a proposal that we can twist/turn/modify. :-) I think the first question to ask is "who are the typical visitors to the site and what do they want to do?" I'm going to guess it will be a mix of mainly the following:

  o End users wanting to know how to get going with a11y support
  o IT staff making decisions about whether or not they want GNOME
  o Developers and future a11y developers wanting to know how they can
    help the GNOME a11y project
  o Developers wanting to know how they can test their stuff for
    a11y and how to fix problems they run into

The top level page, http://live.gnome.org/Accessibility, will be our face to the world. It should be relatively short, clear, and easy to navigate by our target visitors. Much of this information is already available; we just need to organize it and bring it up to date. Here's a potential skeletal outline, though it's not short and probably not clear:

   [Logo] -- we really need a good logo.
   o "A11y 101" (what is a11y?)
   o GNOME A11y is for Real
     o Impact of GNOME a11y around the world
       - Testimonials
       - Case studies (e.g., GNOME in Spain)
     o Commonly used apps that provide compelling access
       - Evolution, gedit, gnome-terminal, ...
       - Firefox 3, Thunderbird, OOo, Pidgin, ...
     o Organizations involved
       - Sun, Mozilla Foundation, Ubuntu, OLPC(?), ...
       - Steering committee (see below)
   o Latest news: ...
   o Active projects and current focus
     - Orca, AT-SPI/DBus investigation, ...
   o Future directions and ideas
     - (achievable tangible projects)
   o GNOME's built-in a11y:
     - keynav, theming, AccessX, MouseTweaks, ...
     - GOK, Dasher, Orca, ...
     - A11y infrastructure
       - AT-SPI, ATK, GAIL, GTK+, bridge(s), ...
       - pyatspi
       - gnome-speech, gnome-mag
       - accerciser
       - External extras: BrlTTY, ...
   o For application/toolkit developers
     - How to develop/test for a11y
     - Matrix of a11y vs. application coverage
     - Accessibility bugs sorted by priority/severity
   o For a11y developers
     - A11y projects for you to help with (see active and future above)
     - Getting started with pyatspi (or whatever)
     - Jumping off points to Orca, GOK, ... developer documentation
   o For operating system distributions
     - Dependency lists
     - Short smoketest steps
       - Accessible login
       - Quick tests with AccessX, GOK, Dasher, Orca, ...
     - Integration tips, tricks, and troubleshooting

I'd propose that the 'doings' of the steering committee be held at http://live.gnome.orca/Accessibility/SteeringCommittee. It will contain our charter (which we need to create), a member list, and meeting agendas/minutes. Representation of the other work of the committee probably should find its way into the rest of the WIKI.

Anyhow, those are some quick thoughts before I need to step out for the day. Thoughts?

Will

PS - I'm going to be on break next week and part of the following week, but I'll try to keep up with e-mail during that time.

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