Re: Braille printing for conferences
- From: Dave Neary <dneary gnome org>
- To: Willie Walker <William Walker Sun COM>
- Cc: GNOME Marketing List <marketing-list gnome org>, Eitan Isaacson <eitan monotonous org>
- Subject: Re: Braille printing for conferences
- Date: Tue, 08 Dec 2009 23:27:50 +0100
Hi,
Shorter would be better, I think.
How about this (pure edit, no additions):
In GNOME, making sure that people with disabilities can use our software
is a core value. From infrastructure allowing our built-in screen reader
or specialised hardware to interact with applications to utilities to
make it easier for people with motor problems to interact with a
computer, accessibility in GNOME is built-in, not bolted on. As a result
GNOME not only has compelling accessibility today, it also provides a
rich foundation for the future.
How does that read? Covers all the bases, I think - a11y is a core
value, what does accessibility mean, and how do we make things easier
for people with disabilities. Maybe needs a quick fact check on the
second sentence (it is at-spi that lets Orca do its thang, isn't it?)
Cheers,
Dave.
Willie Walker wrote:
> Here's a bunch of run-ons... :-)
>
> In GNOME, accessibility by people with disabilities is a core value that
> touches all aspects of the system. With a model of "built in" versus
> "bolted on", the GNOME Accessibility project has helped lead the
> industry in accessible design. From the accessibility infrastructure, to
> the graphical toolkit, to the applications, to the assistive
> technologies, accessibility has been a central consideration from the
> very early days of GNOME. As a result, GNOME not only has compelling
> accessibility today, but it also provides a rich and stable base for
> future accessibility work.
>
> Today, users have built-in keyboard navigation, highly customizable
> fonts/colors/icons, keyboard enhancements such as StickyKeys, the
> MouseTweaks tool that provides mouse clicking features by dwelling, the
> GOK on screen keyboard that can be driven via dwell clicking and
> switches, the Dasher predictive text entry tool, and the Orca screen
> reader and magnifier. Developers also have the glade-3 tool that helps
> encourage accessible user interface design and the accerciser tool that
> helps developers analyze how their application is exposed to the
> built-in accessibility infrastructure. For tomorrow, the GNOME project
> is busily working on enhancing the on screen keyboard and magnifier,
> developing ways to use web cameras to move the mouse based upon
> head/body position, and making the solution much more friendly to
> resource constrained devices such as netbooks and the OLPC.
>
> Will
>
> On Dec 8, 2009, at 1:08 PM, Stormy Peters wrote:
>
>> Looks good.
>>
>> Can we add a sentence or two about what accessibility is or give some
>> examples of the technology?
>>
>> Stormy
>>
>> On Tue, Dec 8, 2009 at 11:07 AM, Willie Walker
>> <William Walker sun com> wrote:
>>> Here's a quick snippet I might propose:
>>>
>>> In GNOME, accessibility is a core value that touches all aspects of
>>> the system. With a model of "built in" versus "bolted on", the GNOME
>>> Accessibility project has helped lead the industry in accessible
>>> design. From the infrastructure, to the graphical toolkit, to the
>>> applications, to the assistive technologies, accessibility has been a
>>> central consideration from the very early days. As a result, GNOME
>>> not only has compelling accessibility today, but it also provides a
>>> rich and stable base for future accessibility work.
>>>
>>> Will
>>>
>>>
>>> On Dec 8, 2009, at 12:58 PM, Stormy Peters wrote:
>>>
>>>> Paul Cutler and Denise Walters were working on that part so
>>>> hopefully one of them will chime in.
>>>>
>>>> It'd probably be good to ask the a11y team for a short summary to
>>>> put there though.
>>>>
>>>> Stormy
>>>>
>>>> On Mon, Dec 7, 2009 at 8:34 PM, Ben Konrath <ben bagu org> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> On Tue, Dec 1, 2009 at 4:03 PM, Stormy Peters <stormy gnome org>
>>>>> wrote:
>>>>> <snip>
>>>>> > Accessibility:
>>>>> >
>>>>> > [photgraph of user interacting with A11Y tools]
>>>>>
>>>>> Is there a reason why there is no text for this section? Did you guys
>>>>> not have time to write something up during the meeting or was it
>>>>> lost
>>>>> in a cut 'n paste? :-) I'm really just wondering what's up just so I
>>>>> know if this is something the a11y team needs to write up if we go
>>>>> ahead with the Braille handouts.
>>>>>
>>>>> Cheers, Ben
>>>>
>>>> marketing-list mailing list
>>>> marketing-list gnome org
>>>> http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/marketing-list
>>>
>
--
Dave Neary
GNOME Foundation member
dneary gnome org
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