Re: gnome, orca and enterprise linux
- From: Willem van der Walt <wvdwalt csir co za>
- To: Peter Korn <Peter Korn Sun COM>
- Cc: Gnome accessibility <gnome-accessibility-list gnome org>
- Subject: Re: gnome, orca and enterprise linux
- Date: Wed, 9 Apr 2008 11:28:13 +0200 (SAST)
What you are saying Peter makes a lot of sense.
I just want to make sure of something which I have never tested.
The orca/gnome setup on a client machine will not read information
redirected from another machine like the oracle server using the
export DISPLAY=client.host.name:0.0 method.
Is this assumption correct?
TIA, Willem
On Tue, 8 Apr 2008, Peter Korn wrote:
> Hi Don,
>
> > Hi all,
> >
> > I have posted much of this to the orca-list so my appologies for the cross-posting.
> >
> > My situation is that I am needing to run oracle enterprise linus 5.0.01 (a derrivative of rhel 5.0).
> > It coms with orca-1.0-2.fc6, and associated packages.
> >
> > All was fine when I installed the o/s. However, I wanted to make a couple of small changes like adding braille support, and adding the ttsynth speech synthesizer.
> >
> > ...
> >
> > My desire is to get an environment stable enough to perform accessibility testing of Oracle JDeveloper and Oracle database management tools. Oracle would prefer that I use enterprise linux rather than one of the more "accessible" flavors like ubuntu, fedora, or debian.
> >
> > Any suggestions would be appreciated.
>
> Separate from any specific suggestions you may get as to the minimum set
> of packages to update to make this all work, I'd like to share with you
> a basic observation - one we've struggled with at Sun in our decisions
> about when and how to fold things like Orca into our Solaris releases.
>
> Accessibility improvements are happening at a *very* rapid pace, and
> they are doing so in the latest GNOME releases, on the latest OS
> releases (on top of the latest Linux kernels, latest Solaris builds).
> Insisting on using the latest in accessibility on top of a slow-moving,
> conservative "enterprise" edition is always going to be a huge pain, and
> always going to involve hard-to-track-down bugs.
>
> My strong recommendation is to test your apps for full accessibility
> with the full support for the latest accessibility features on the
> non-enterprise editions of UNIX variants - e.g. on Ubuntu or Fedora or
> OpenSolaris (and perhaps best, a bit on all three). Then go back and
> make sure that the accessibility support (whatever it is) in the
> "slow-moving and conservative" enterprise editions also work, so you
> know you are supporting the less functional accessibility that is being
> sold in the enterprise variants. In that way, you will know that you
> will work with what is supported today in the enterprise (with it's less
> feature-full accessibility), as well as the latest in accessibility that
> will become part of tomorrow's enterprise UNIX OS releases.
>
> Perhaps this is an error on my part, but I frankly think an organization
> is more likely to give a user with a disability a copy of
> Ubuntu/Fedora/OpenSolaris rather than attempt to support some odd
> mixture of old and new platform libraries in an edition of an
> "enterprise" UNIX. It'll be much less headache and hassle. And of
> course, for users who don't need the newer features (e.g .a user for
> whom a large print theme is all they need for their vision impairment),
> enterprise editions are largely there and can be used "directly, out of
> the box".
>
>
> Regards,
>
> Peter Korn
> Accessibility Architect,
> Sun Microsystems, Inc.
> _______________________________________________
> gnome-accessibility-list mailing list
> gnome-accessibility-list gnome org
> http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-accessibility-list
>
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