Re: [orca-list] Speech-dispatcher library for C#?



Hello Nikita,
wow! I didn't have an idea that such mailing lists even exist in first
place. :D
I guess I should invest more time into searching these communities, as
they will most likely have more potential users to communicate with.

Best regards

Rastislav
V Piatok,  31. júl 2020 o 15:28 +0300, Nikita via orca-list napísal(a):
Hi Rastislav,
There are several mailing lists for blind mathematicians and other
scientists.
It makes sense to announce your MathML project there.
1. The list for blind mathematicians
Posting blindmath nfbnet org
Subscription blindmath-request nfbnet org?subject=subscribe
2. The List for Blind social scientists
Posting social-sciences-list nfbnet org
Subscription social-sciences-list-request nfbnet org?subject=subscrib
e
3. The list for blind users of the R (there is a large concentration
of statisticians)
Posting blindrug nfbnet org
Subscription blindrug-request nfbnet org?subject=subscribe
Best regards, Nikita.

-----Original Message-----
From: orca-list <orca-list-bounces gnome org> On Behalf Of Rastislav
Kiss via orca-list
Sent: Friday, July 31, 2020 1:21 AM
To: orca-list gnome org
Subject: Re: [orca-list] Speech-dispatcher library for C#?

Hello,
I meaned some mailing lists about blind people and Linux, that's
probably a better formulation. Something like Eyes-free mailing list
for Android. People were sharing there basically everithing related
to
our community, from screenreader updates, through recommendations to
mailing apps to experiences with phones, tablets, etc.
If one released an app and wanted it to be noticed by as many blind
people as possible, Eyes-free was the best place. If one wanted
experiences of others with NVIDIA shell TV Box and its accessibility,
Eyes-free was the best place. And if one simply wanted to ask for a
program to do something, for example ocr a document, Eyes-free was
again very helpful.

Searching a related community is a good point for some of my
projects,
for example my Ride code editor for Linux probably won't get high
attention on places with small concentration of developers.
But with most of them it's bit more complicated. Chinfusor for
example
is designed to be used by people who speak more languages, but
whether
those people, especially if they're not technical, would be present
in
speech-dispatcher mailing list... I don't know.
A program for reading MathML is my other project. Its target audience
are blind high-school students, university students, scientists from
many areas such as mathematics, physics, artificial intelligence,
informatics and many more.
if there was a mailing-list like eyes-free, all of those people would
likely to be present there, as all of them are blind and use Linux,
so
they want to have an image, what's happening in the Linux
accessibility
for blind world.

Plus I have projects with much wider target groups, like a program to
ocr user's screen. It can be used by any blind person, and is only
related to blind people using Linux.

It would need a solid, heavily-linuxified community. :)

Best regards

Rastislav
V Štvrtok,  30. júl 2020 o 20:11 +0200, Samuel Thibault napísal(a):
Rastislav Kiss via orca-list, le jeu. 30 juil. 2020 19:58:55 +0200,
a
ecrit:
this question is probably quite off-topic here

The problem is not really being off-topic (it's relatively close to
orca-list), but that you will miss reaching the set of people who
would
most probably have a proper answer.

Btw, is there a mailing list related to Linux accessibility in
general?

I don't think there is, because that would be too vague:
accessibility
for non-sighted? Accessibility for muscular impairement? Concerning
the
web? The desktop? Text reading? Screen magnification? Debian?
RedHat?
...

One example is my Chinfusor project, the speech-dispatcher engine
for
reading multi-alphabetical texts,

That would probably be useful to discuss on the speechd list.

What would be the correct place to inform about these things?

For new projects, I would say send a note on mailing lists of
projects
that resemble most to yours, since the people following it may want
to
follow yours for similar reasons. Also, Linux distribution mailing
lists
could be useful so that the software gets packaged.

Samuel

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