Re: that darned accessibility capplet
- From: Bill Haneman <bill haneman sun com>
- To: desktop-devel-list gnome org
- Cc: earl johnson sun com
- Subject: Re: that darned accessibility capplet
- Date: 27 Sep 2002 15:06:00 +0100
Earl Johnson said:
>
> Hi,
>
> I'm not on this alias so please make sure your replies include my email
> - earl johnson sun com
>
> This is re-run feedback from me but I think the capplet should be a
> tabbed pane with 2 tabs - one tab for StickyKeys, MouseKeys, and
> ToggleKeys; the other a keyboard response tab containing RepeatKeys,
> BounceKeys, and SlowKeys. This sure would go a long way in reducing the
> capplet's current clutter and make the interface easier to use (e.g.
> the individual range setting controls wouldn't have to be so small).
If you like it Earl, I certainly won't contradict you :-).
The size issue is important for mouse users, but I always thought most
accessX users were keyboarders? Not that we want to ignore the
keyboard-plus-mouse folks. What do you think about the fact that this
would require another keystroke (to change "notebook tabs") sometimes?
(e.g. does size really matter?)
... more comments below....
> > > - the title says "AccessX" which is UNIX-workstation-cruft
> > > terminology.
> >
> > It does looks a little ugly, but 'accessx' is a long-standing and
> > well-understood term in the accessibility community. Having it only
> > show up in the window title was a compromise; nobody looks in window
> > titles anyway :) Perhaps this could go away after a few releases when
> > people have made the connection, but I guess we'll always be getting new
> > users from other desktops, hopefully!
>
> EJ AccessX is long standing in the X and Linux realm but the real
> portion that is inherited cruft is Access*. The other names
> this group of features are known as is AccessPak (Msoft's
> name), AccessDOS (for DOS), and I forget what Apple calls it
> (tho I don't remember it having the crufty Access name in it).
> As further background, the X and DOS were chosen to signify the
> platform they ran on. Following this thought, if a new name is
> desired maybe it could be called AccessG where the G signifies
> GNOME. Or, just playing, AccessGeeWhiz.
>
> But staying with AccessX as Calum suggests shouldn't cause
> problems because most users on the Unix, Linux, and Windows
> platforms know what AccessX is or recognize that Access* means
> this is where they find the features AccessX and others provide.
>
> >
>
> > > - the "enable keyboard accessibility" checkbox is bad; most users
> > > here will interpret it to mean "make my keyboard work" and wonder
> > > why they would uncheck it.
> > >
> > > Also, there is no reason why you can't just check or uncheck the
> > > four specific checkboxes (mouse keys, bounce keys, etc.) as you
> > > have to do on Windows XP, especially given the need to trim the
> > > size of this control panel. You don't need the save-myself-a-couple
> > > clicks extra checkbox that has an unclear label.
> >
> > This is a possibility I guess. One problem you would get with doing it
> > this way is when the "turn off when unused for n seconds" feature kicked
> > in, there would be no quick way of turning it back on again.
> >
> > Unfortunately the rationale for some of these features has been lost in
> > the mists of time-- they've been in AccessX for years. (Perhaps Earl can
> > remind us of some of them-- cc'ing him). We would definitely need to run
> > that sort of feature change past the accessibility community before we
> > could go ahead with it.
> >
> EJ On "enable keyboard accessibility"
> AccessX features are supposed to be invokable from any system.
> This is great in public and collaborative environments for
> people who need its features - no matter where they go they can
> make the right keypresses and turn on AccessX features without
> having to open up the AccessX interface (which would be
> impossible for someone who can't use a mouse). But this power
> sucks for those who don't need the features and use
> applications that cause this user to inadvertantly invoke a
> feature (e.g. shoot-em-up games regularly use left and right
> shift keys to control guns, etc.). So "enable keyboard
> accessibility" was added to let the user who didn't need
> AccessX features prevent the system from turning on a feature
> inadvertantly from the keyboard (e.g. it prevents 5 taps on the
> Shift key from invoking StickyKeys).
>
> Window's added an additional feature along these lines that
> AccessX never had - it posts a popup the first time any feature
> is invoked from the keyboard and asks the user then if they
> want to fully disable keyboard accessibility. This would be a
> good thing to see added to the GNOME desktop.
Yeah, that does sound cool, and it will help prevent weird but reports
;-)
> On "turn off when unused for n seconds"
> Public environments such as libraries need to provide systems
> that all users can access. But they typically can't afford to
> purchase machines that only people with disabilities can use -
> they want/need each system they purchase to be usable by all
> users. So while AccessX helps places like libraries minimize
> the number of systems they need to purchase, problems will
> abound for people without disabilities who use a system after a
> person who has turned on an AccessX feature leaves without
> turning the feature off. The auto turn off feature turns off
> all AccessX feature after a specified period of keyboard
> inactivity and was introduced to prevent this problem.
>
> Earl
[
Date Prev][
Date Next] [
Thread Prev][
Thread Next]
[
Thread Index]
[
Date Index]
[
Author Index]