[orca-list] Please allow me to introduce myself, I'm (not) a man of wealth and taste!
- From: "Anthony Sales" <tony sales rncb ac uk>
- To: <orca-list gnome org>, <ubuntu-accessibility lists ubuntu com>
- Subject: [orca-list] Please allow me to introduce myself, I'm (not) a man of wealth and taste!
- Date: Tue, 2 Dec 2008 19:20:21 -0000
Greetings
earthlings!
My name
is Tony Sales and I currently work as the ICT Development Officer at the Royal
National College for the Blind in Hereford. I have recently released (in the
loosest possible sense of the word) a customised version of Ubuntu called
Vibuntu (or Vinux - can't decide!) which is aimed at visually impaired
users. It is still very early
days, but I decided to make it available straight-away so that I could collect
feedback, suggestions and advice from interested parties rather than keep it
hidden away until it is finished (alledgedly).
My vision (or
lack of it) is to produce an easy to use fully accessible version of Ubuntu,
that just works out of the box for VI users, and still has all the glitz and
glamour of Ubuntu for sighted users. In other words I am not trying to create a
distro which will only be used by visually impaired users, but a generic distro
that can be used by anybody to do the everyday kind of things people want to do
like browse the internet, listen to music, send e-mails etc. For example so it
could be used in schools, colleges and homes by those of us who can't afford or
just don't want to pay through the nose for expensive proprietary solutions (no
names mentioned).
At the moment
I am using remastersys to modify an installed system and create a distribution
with a pre-configured user account, overcoming obstacles as I find them. The
first issue to deal with is the problem of Orca not wanting to read out Ubiquity
(or any other application opened with root permissions). I could do this by
enabling a root user account for installation and admin tasks, but because of
the security risks this would cause I am working on simple bash script that
stops orca, restarts it in --no-setup mode, runs the app (e.g. Ubiquity) and
then restarts the original Orca session. I already have a working script but it
needs a few tweaks so that it is invisible as possible to the user. However,
someone mentioned that this could be attained by simply editing one of the orca
config files. If anyone can shed any light on this or other tweaks/tips I would
be happy to include them in future versions of Vibuntu, so other people don't
have to.
I want to try
and keep to the original Ubuntu releases as closely as possible, ideally not
adding anything that isn't included on the official release unless absolutely
necessary, and only then if it is open-source GPL licenced (unless permission is
granted by the developers). In a perfect world Ubuntu would already be
fully accessible to VI users and I wouldn't have to do this, I live in hope! The
only app I have added so far is remastersys, which is absolutely essential at
the moment. I am also very keen on trying to keep the iso below 702Mb so
it fits on a CD, I don't really want to produce a bloated distro full of
everything under the sun. I want to provide the basics and let people add extra
apps and codecs etc themselves.
I would be
happy to receive any feedback, suggestions, criticisms, abuse, law suits
and/or death threats (preferably in that order) about Vibuntu and what I
am trying to acheive!
Tony Sales
(aka drbongo)
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