[orca-list] Update/NFB
- From: Christian Hofstader <cdh gnu org>
- To: orca-list gnome org, accessibility gnu org, access-activists gnu org, programmingblind freelists org, speech-reco gnu org, Vinux Firefox Team <vinux-firefox lists quantummyst com>, vinux-development googlegroups com, Janina Sajka <janina a11y org>, Open A11y <accessibility a11y org>, Peter Korn <peter korn oracle com>
- Subject: [orca-list] Update/NFB
- Date: Sun, 27 Jun 2010 08:01:16 -0400
Hi Everyone,
Sorry for the major cross post but the intersection of the sets of
these lists is not complete so I needed to get this to as many people
as I can as soon as I could get it assembled.
If you are interested in the update on GNU Accessibility, read the top
part. If you are interested in the NFB convention, search for "NFB" (all
caps) and you'll land where that part starts. If you are interested in
all of this, set your screen reader to read to end of document and sit
back and enjoy this paramountly boring bit of propaganda.
If you would like to join the discussion on GNU Accessibility please
send an email to accessibility-request gnu org with "subscribe" in the
subject line sans quotes.
First, I'd like to fill you folks in on what I've been doing with the
GNU Accessibility Initiative over the past four months or so since I
jumped into this position full time.
First, we have built a team of volunteers who are ready and willing to
start hacking for accessibility on GNU/Linux systems. We are trying to
match people with projects and vice versa as a lot of individuals were
working in a vacuum or had no idea where to start. Pairing interests to
real efforts is an activity we can do at no cost but get a lot of value
for our time.
--
Second, we have secured funding to operate a school for people with vision impairment in Nepal for one full
year. They will be educating 1500 blind students in the English language, computer skills using free software
and, for those interested in moving forward, programming and/or IT skills. This school will be the first of
its kind in Nepal.
Third, I've entered discussions with some people who want to do a school similar to that in Nepal but in
Brazil. They are more than a year behind our Nepalese friends (no business plan yet, they're still debating
site selection, etc.) but we hope
to see this ramp up in the next 9 to 12 months.
Fourth, we've started design on the GNU Accessibility web site. This is slow going as we haven't a volunteer
with much time to put into this effort yet.
Fifth, we assembled and led an ad hoc group of government agency and non-profit accessibility people to work
on public comments for Section 255/508 and submitted our own comments as well. This was a big task and we
feel very good that we spread the word about some issues that violate the fundamentals of free software while
also breaking accessibility.
Sixth, we have become real good friends with the vinux guys and will be working together on future versions
of this excellent distro.
We've a bunch of other irons in the fire but these are the biggies as of right now.
NFB Convention:
I will be at the NFB convention in Dallas for the entire week. We will have some other GNU Accessibility
insiders around but we need help leading up to the convention. Specifically:
1. We need someone with an embosser to make about 1000 stickers in braille. We can get the clear plastic
sticker pages at Staples and print four per page so it would be 250 pages in total. We can get them cut at
any Kinko in the world for a couple of pennies per sheet and, if needed, we can do that part in Dallas as,
although it is Texas, there are some signs of civilization - including copy shops.
2. We need to make about 500 CDs with the vinux 3.0.x distro bearing the slogan, "GNU and Vinux, The Accessibility Super
Heroes." This quote is a paraphrasing of a print sticker we have that says, "GNU and Linux, The Dynamic Duo,"
which has pictures of super hero like images on them. There is a company here in St. Petersburg, Florida that does such but tends
to have a wait list. If anyone knows of a reasonably priced CD duplication service that's cheap and can get them turned around
and to Dallas by July 3, please send me their contact information.
3. Of course, if you will be in Dallas, please look us up. The room is in my name and my primary purpose for
being there is to raise awareness of our initiative and meet with a VIP list of folks privately to discuss
how we can all work together on software freedom for people with vision impairment. So, if you'd like to get
together for coffee or a sandwich or something like that, please write to me off-list and we'll see what we
can figure out.
3.1 If you will be at NFB and would like to help out by distributing stickers and CDs, please tell me so we
can hook up and get these things out to the masses.
4. If you are going to ACB and want to hand out some of these materials, please write to me and, once we
figure out how to get them to you, we can ship a box of stuff to you from our supply.
Happy Hacking,
cdh
Christian Hofstader
Director of Access Technology
FSF/Project GNU
http://www.gnu.org, http://www.fsf.org
GNU's Not Unix!
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