Re: [orca-list] new a11y Dev Team was Most accessible IDE for java
- From: chrys87 web de
- To: orca-list gnome org
- Subject: Re: [orca-list] new a11y Dev Team was Most accessible IDE for java
- Date: Tue, 27 Dec 2016 18:50:48 +0000
Howdy Guys,
That topic brings me to something i discussed on sonar list a few weeks ago. The problem in a11y is more
general. There are not many companys that are intrested in provide good a11y support on linux world. Thats
why we should learn to fix problems and improve the Situation by ourself. To help Joanie and all other
people that currently do most of the work for us.
Thats why I currently form a new Dev Team (AIT = accessibility improvements and Toolkits).
Currently we are about 5 people. If you are intrested in helping or improve the situation let me know. if
you are not a programmer but you are intrested in learning its no problem. you will get an skilled guy on
your side that can learn and coach you.
If you are a Dev feel free to contact me. More people will have more fun and the world might more easy if
you are not alone ;).
Our plan is to fix ugly a11y bugs and provide useful tools (like SOPS, OCRdesktop or OCRpdf).
Currently i m working on an modular modern and feature rich console screenreader with my team. Its in an
good shape and will get an offical announcement soon.
What you guys think about?
Looking for feedback,
Cheers Chrys
Am Mi. Dez. 21 20:51:00 2016 GMT+0100 schrieb Jason White via orca-list:
Krishnakant <krmane openmailbox org> wrote:
Yes from your perspective where there are different requirements and
paradimes, you are absolutely correct.
Of course current systems have few big advantages.
I have to work with my sighted colleagues day in and day out.
I have to exactly point out things to them graphically or you may say the
way they see it visually.
I work with sighted colleagues too, but I usually don't need to know how
applications are presented visually to perform my task. I think this level of
information should be available, but it isn't good as the default approach to
presenting a braille or spoken interface. There are people who have the need
you describe, and this should be supported, but there are better ways of
creating effective spoken interaction.
There's a broader move toward virtual agents and spoken interaction at the
moment. The Linux and free software community is regrettably not at the
forefront of this work yet. If you've ever used an Amazon Echo (even if only
in a technology demonstration), you'll know first hand what a high-quality
spoken interface can do. People who buy such a device don't want to talk to it
about buttons, menus, sliders, entry fields etc. - they want to use the
vocabulary of the application domain.
If there's a sustained move toward the notion that applications need to
support such high-quality language-based interactions, then perhaps we'll move
beyond the treadmill of GUI accessibility, with all of its problems, and
toward a world in which user interfaces are inherently interactive and
language-based as well as graphical - either or both according to the user's
needs.
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orca-list gnome org
https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/orca-list
Orca wiki: https://wiki.gnome.org/Projects/Orca
Orca documentation: https://help.gnome.org/users/orca/stable/
GNOME Universal Access guide: https://help.gnome.org/users/gnome-help/stable/a11y.html
Log bugs and feature requests at http://bugzilla.gnome.org
--
Gesendet von meinem Jolla
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