Re: [orca-list] The State Of Linux Accessibility
- From: Alex Midence <alex midence gmail com>
- To: "'kendell clark'" <coffeekingms gmail com>, "'Vincenzo Rubano'" <vincenzo rubano studio unibo it>, "'Keith Hinton'" <keithint1234 gmail com>
- Cc: 'orca-list' <orca-list gnome org>
- Subject: Re: [orca-list] The State Of Linux Accessibility
- Date: Wed, 5 Aug 2015 17:45:03 -0500
Audio production is something of a tender spot for me. I did some pretty extensive digging a few years ago
on the subject and my findings were frankly disappointing.
Fact: Historically, one of the vocations at which blind people have exceled has been music. Some noteworthy
blind musicians the reader may be acquainted with include Homer, Ah Bing, Francesco Da Milano, Joaquin
Rodrigo, Andrea Bocelli, Ray Charles, Stevie wonder, Jeff Healey, José Feliciano and, last but certainly not
by a million miles least Monsieur Louis Braille.
Now then, the question was posed by a blind musician from the eastern U.S. seaboard if there were anything
accessible and comparable to Sound Forge and Audition in Windows on the Linux platform. These are
professional quality pieces of music software. I found two of them which most closely matched up in features
and capabilities. These were Ardour built on GTK and Rosegarden built on QT. Be it know that these far
outstrip something like Jokosh and Audacity in what they can do as they target professional musicians as
opposed to people dabbling in the odd sound editing project or two. Neither one of these pieces of software
were accessible. Neither was Lilipond or fluidsynth. So, at this time, there is no accessible way for the
average blind musical professional to work with any score editing, mixing or sound studio type software in so
far as I know. It's a real bummer. I would *Love* to be proven wrong on this one so, please be my guest.
Alex M
-----Original Message-----
From: kendell clark [mailto:coffeekingms gmail com]
Sent: Wednesday, August 05, 2015 4:58 PM
To: Alex Midence; 'Vincenzo Rubano'; 'Keith Hinton'
Cc: 'orca-list'
Subject: Re: [orca-list] The State Of Linux Accessibility
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hi
Impress is an absolutely valid point. I don't know why orca works with it so poorly, but if I had to guess,
I'd say a combination of poor libreoffice accessibility support and no orca specific code for it. If no one
has filed a bug against impress, I'll go ahead and do that now.
As for being able to do things on linux you could do on windows, this is valid, up to a point. The people
that usually make statements like this, or at least the people I deal with who do, often mean, "I want to do
the same thing on linux that I did on windows, using the same programs and doing it the exact same way I used
to do it on windows".
Which means, for example, when you tell them that there's no mush z in linux but that there's tintin and a
sound pack for alter aeon, "that's too hard. I want a gui installer that does all of this for me because
that's how windows does it. If I can't have that then linux sucks and I won't use it." Pdf files is another
area where linux needs improving. This is supposed to improve greatly in gnome 3.18, but I haven't tested it
yet. Then again, the only accessible pdf reader on windows is adobe's own, so while it might work better
there, you are limited in what programs you can use. None of the open source or alternative pdf readers in
windows as far as I know work with any screen readers. I'd argue that linux is accessible enough for
beginner, intermediate, and advanced work, depending of course on the kind of work you do. Audio production
is one area where blind people cling to windows. There are people on this list who know a lot more about this
than I do but if windows wins out in this area then we need to buck up and fix it. For what little audio work
I do, download from youtube, converting and editing files and audio metadata, linux works absolutely fine and
there are gui options for all. As for the crackling, this is a well known issue. I understand it has
something to do with speech-dispatcher's use of the pulse audio api. Luke and jeremy ... something, can't
remember his last name, are actively working to fix this, which should be available in either a new
speech-dispatcher 0.8 release or a 0.9 release, I'm not sure yet. But it's definitely known and being worked
on. I'd say this in closing. No matter which platform you use, linux, windows, ios, android, osx, there are
going to be areas where accessibility is great and those dark corners where it could be better. It's just the
nature of accessibility. Linux wins out in my opinion mostly due to it's open source model, it's lack of
activation and it's ease of maintenance. I can throw a distro on a usb drive and boot it on any computer and
have a live working environment. I can either use that as is or install it.
I understand osx can do something similar, I've never used it. I say linux wins out because it's not limited
to a particular brand of computer by license agreements. My two scents.
Thanks
Kendell clark
Alex Midence wrote:
I don't know. I think comparing how well something can be accessibly
accomplished in Linux to how well that same task can be done in
Windows is a valid exercise as long as you don't make sweeping
statements like "The overall accessibility experience in Linux sucks
compared to Windows." If you are used to being able to do X on one
platform, it is natural to feel you should be able to do it on another
just as accessibly and with as little extra effort on your part as you
had to expend on the other platform.
With Linux, my main gripe is presentations. I rely on them every day
at work since I'm a trainer and they are something of a lifeblood for
me. In Windows, we use PowerPoint which Window Eyes, in particular,
works extremely well with. Jaws does OK but Window Eyes is absolutely
outstanding with it. I can't say the same with Orca and Impress. If
I got hired somewhere and their company policy was to have all their
class presentations in Impress format, I'd be in deep trouble. I'd
have to argue for letting me use Beamer which is a part of LaTEx. I'd
still be in hot water because the output is to PDF's which Evince
handles only rudimentarily in regular documents and very poorly in pdf
slides. I'd have to see about having them let me make a very basic
Windows vm so I can use Adobe while that all gets sorted out. I
understand there's a way to do this sort of thing with html and
javascript but I don't know it yet. So, it would be natural for
someone like me to wish that presentations were as easy to do
accessibly in Linux as they are in windows where you don't have to
learn a complex markup language to get the job done.
Just an example. Alex M
-----Original Message----- From: orca-list
[mailto:orca-list-bounces gnome org] On Behalf Of kendell clark
Sent: Wednesday, August 05, 2015 4:22 PM To: Vincenzo Rubano; Keith
Hinton Cc: orca-list Subject: Re: [orca-list] The State Of Linux
Accessibility
hi This is partly valid and partly not. The stuff about unlabeled
controls in gnome is absolutely spot on. While it's gotten quite a bit
better in the newest gnome, version 3.16, there are still areas in the
control center that aren't labeled well. I've filed bugs against these
parts and we're just waiting for fixes. Mate is also pretty
accessible. You *do* get access to the applets. It is a bit weird
though, and I don't really understand what's causing orca to not like
the panel very much. I'd have to say a combination of old gnome 2 code
in orca that mate uses and old accessibility code on mate's part. Both
can be fixed. We *need* more users. I'm rather tired of people picking
on linux's accessibility issues as if they were written in stone. Not
that you've done that. The issues can get fixed. It's going to take
more orca users doing what I and joanie do. File bugs, test stuff,
report what doesn't work. I've not seen much of this here, though
granted not everyone has the luxury of sitting around all day like I
do. Gnome was part of GSOC this year and they had a couple of people
hacking on java atk wrapper specifically to bring java accessibility
up to snuff.
Joanie has dropped a couple of hints that gnome 3.18's accessibility
will be much better, so I believe her, although I haven't been able to
find anything on that. I've used windows, including the latest version
from redmond. To be completely blunt, if this is the best ms can put
out, we've got it made. The accessibility issues will no doubt get
fixed with windows updates, but if this were my first impression of
windows I'd be saying it's accessibility were going backwards. Tested
with the latest windows
10 RTM build. We just need to focus on makeing an already great OS
even greater. We do this by filing bugs, testing features. We don't do
it by looking at what windows does or does not do better and
constantly comparing the two. I'm guilty of this myself sometimes,
particularly when I feel close to burning out. That's my two scents
Thanks Kendell clark
Vincenzo Rubano wrote:
Hi Keith,
I know this message will make some people angry, but I want to share
my point of view on linux accessibility. This came out rather long,
so enjoy a cup of coffee while reading. ;)
First off, when talking about linux accessibility I like to clarify
what I think is an important aspect: fragmentation is a problem for
accessibility. Since every piece of software can be configured with
different options/different library versions/different parameters and
each distribution can make a lot of decisions on these aspects, it’s
hard to say what’s accessible and what is not. As you can see, there
are too many variables to consider. Too many for my tastes…
This being said, we have to distinguish between command line
accessibility and GUI accessibility. If we talk about command line,
we’re in a great situation. Just choose a kernel which is optimally
configured for speakup (i.e. the debian kernel starting from version
3.2 or the Talking Arch one are two examples that I’ve used). If we
talk about GUI, well, that’s another story…
The only “accessible” desktops out of the box are Gnome and Mate.
Please note the quotes wrapping the “accessible” word, their meanings
will be clearer after the lines below. Gnome works, but there are
some areas of the Gnome-Shell that are completely inaccessible for
Orca. Gnome Control Center has unlabeled controls scattered here and
there with some of them being not usable at all and Gnome Tweak Tool
has the same issues plus a few focus-related ones. Evolution, the
default mail client included in Gnome, is completely inaccessible
(1). There are other Gnome pieces that are not accessible, but my
memory does not recall their names. Tested with Gnome 3.14.3 and Orca
3.14.3.
Mate is a Gnome 2 fork. It is accessible, if you mind not having
access to most of the applets (i.e. the applet to control wifi
connections) and having unreliable multiple file selection due to
Orca not announcing properly when an item is selected or not. Add a
few other issues here and there and that’s the Mate situation.
Tested with Mate 1.8.* and Orca 3.14.3.
Libreoffice/openoffice are the only complete office suites for linux.
Saying that they’re accessible is really an abuse of the word,
though. Libreoffice Writer can be used to some degree, but if you
need to have complex formatting, multiple tables with many rows and
columns and form controls embedded in your document, then be prepared
to a lot of accessibility issues. And remember that you won’t be able
to use structural navigation within LibreOffice documents due to a
Libreoffice bug sitting in their queue for years. Impress, Calc, Base
and Math have even more severe and critical accessibility issues that
make them far from being usable if you’re blind. Tested with
Libreoffice 4.3.* and
4.4.* with Orca 3.14.3. Notice that LibreOffice seems to run a little
bit better under Debian than under Ubuntu, but don’t ask me the
reason why.
The only decent way to browse the Web with orca is using Firefox.
There’s not too much to complain about that, if you don’t mind having
a lot of troubles with complex applications such as webmails and with
websites that often refresh the page via ajax. Also, make sure to
enable the Orca configuration option to show one control for each
line in a web page, otherwise you’ll have a lot of latency whenever
you get to a line with more than
10 controls (i.e. 10 radio buttons). (2)
Let’s spend some words on the Speech Dispatcher/Alsa/PulseAudio
thing. Wow, too many parties involved, don’t you think so?
Anyways, I’ve always had two issues: 1. From the SpeechDispatcher
configuration, enable a module which is not present in
SpeechDispatcher (i.e module for Pico under a Debian installation).
Restart the SpeechDispatcher service and… Voilà, no speech at all!
And no way to recover, unless you can remotely access your machine or
you have a Braille display or sighted assistance to rely on. Tested
with Debian Wheezy/Jessie. 2. While the computer is of, plug in your
headsets. Turn on the computer.
Unplug the headsets: you would expect audio to come from your laptop
speakers, but you won’t get audio output at all. Plug in again your
headsets and… Audio is there. Tested under Debian Wheezy/Jessie and
Ubuntu-Mate 14.04.
Finally, let me spend some words on development. Accessibility bugs
that can be fixed/worked around in Orca get fixed rather quickly, but
the problem is that those fixes get to end users too slowly for my
tastes. If a bug is in the accessibility infrastructure (i.e.
pyatspi, atspi, atk and others), then they’ll be sitting there for
years. Not to mention bugs within Gnome itself or third party
apps/frameworks (LibreOffice and Qt just to mention two examples).
(1): Evolution accessibility is improving from what I can read, but
currently it’s tricky to get to the message body after you open it.
There is thunderbird as an alternative, but if you are like me and
use more than 5 different mailboxes with 20+ different folders and
thousands of messages, you won't find Thunderbird a great piece of
software to work with in terms of accessibility.
(2) Recently, there has been some work to improve these aspects in
Orca. We’ll see them in a 3.18 or something like that release, so be
patient if you need some serious accessibility support within web
content.
Vincenzo.
Il giorno 05 ago 2015, alle ore 08:30, Keith Hinton
<keithint1234 gmail com> ha scritto:
Hi folks, it has been a very long while since I have posted to the
Orca mailing list. In fact, more than a year. I was writing in to
find out from people who know what they are talking about what the
current state of Linux accessibility is with Orca, etc. I was
wondering how the major Linux distributions like Fedora, Open Sues,
etc are doing with Orca, Speech Dispatcher, and generally over all
how is Linux these days? I have avoided Linux for a long while
because I have a friend who believes actually, who is utterly
convinced that linux accessibility is going backwards. But I don't
honestly know for sure if that is so. So, I naturally question him
and would like to know from those of you out their who are involved
in Linux accessibility generally how do you think Linux is? WouldI
be able to run something under Gnome these days like Virtual Box?
How does Linux perform with the latest and greatest CPUs, multi core
SMP hardware and such from your experiences>? My friend says to me
that most of you are using old clunky outdated hardware which is why
you don't get Speech Dispatcher or Orca subsystem crashes, etc. But
I haven't used Linux in so long that I figure the time is now to
actually just come out and ask and see what responses I get.
Obviously, I know that everybody will have their own distribution
prefferences. But I'm not here to start a war on Ubuntu, vs Fadora,
etc. I am trying aside from an OS specific fight to figure out what
the current honest state of Linux accessibility is. Is it actually
falling back and going backwards and thus dying out? I don't know.
Is it worth grabbing something like the latest oh, I don't know,
Open Suse, Fadora or similar and giving Orca a spin?
So I was hopeing some of you out their might have a better idea.
Thanks!
All the best, Keith
_______________________________________________ orca-list mailing
list orca-list gnome org
https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/orca-list Visit
http://live.gnome.org/Orca for more information on Orca. The manual
is at
http://library.gnome.org/users/gnome-access-guide/nightly/ats-2.html
The FAQ is at http://live.gnome.org/Orca/FrequentlyAskedQuestions
Log bugs and feature requests at http://bugzilla.gnome.org Find out
how to help at http://live.gnome.org/Orca/HowCanIHelp
_______________________________________________ orca-list mailing
list orca-list gnome org
https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/orca-list Visit
http://live.gnome.org/Orca for more information on Orca. The manual
is at
http://library.gnome.org/users/gnome-access-guide/nightly/ats-2.html
The FAQ is at http://live.gnome.org/Orca/FrequentlyAskedQuestions
Log bugs and feature requests at http://bugzilla.gnome.org Find out
how to help at http://live.gnome.org/Orca/HowCanIHelp
_______________________________________________ orca-list mailing list
orca-list gnome org https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/orca-list
Visit http://live.gnome.org/Orca for more information on Orca. The
manual is at
http://library.gnome.org/users/gnome-access-guide/nightly/ats-2.html
The FAQ is at http://live.gnome.org/Orca/FrequentlyAskedQuestions
Log bugs and feature requests at http://bugzilla.gnome.org Find out
how to help at http://live.gnome.org/Orca/HowCanIHelp
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