Re: [g-a-devel] Re: Gnopernicus on a Live CD?



Hi
 
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Thursday, February 17, 2005 6:14 AM
Subject: Re: [g-a-devel] Re: Gnopernicus on a Live CD?

Hi Thomas, Luke:

The licensing issue is a real shame, but I don't know of an easy fix
either, especially for the 'Live CD'
However, for the regular Ubuntu distribution I do think that it would be
worthwhile to include the java-access-bridge, and build OpenOffice.org
to include the accessibility support. 
 
I've been working on a similar arrangement for Fedora users, and  I can certainly make new rpms of OpenOffice.org and the java access bridge for rpm based Linux distros.
Which as you might agree it is probably time that rpms for this stuff becomes easy to obtain and install without compiling this from source.
 
The java-access-bridge code and
the OO.o accessibility code is LGPL, so the licensing issue would then
be reduced to that of a 'soft' dependency on a non-free JVM -
 
Which is one reason Mandrake, Fedora, and other distributions probably don't include the access bridge with their stock distributions. While the bridge is free the vm is not so they choose not to include it.
However, at some point interested parties can easily make spin off distrobutions including this stuff as said.
It sounds like a fair solution to include  the bridge, accessible OpenOffice.org, on our accessible distros and then leave it to the user to get whatever can not legally be included via license issues.
 
there
would be no non-free code bundled.  Ubuntu users would then be able, at
their sole discretion, to independently download and use the Sun JVM in
order to complete their OpenOffice accessibility solution.
Well, there are also other alternatives. Such as I know that Mandrake does not include the java runtime and sdk with their free or standard releases. However, the Delux version has several goodies  like java included. Obviously, there are ways to license the runtime for redistrobution and then sell it with a comercial version of Linux.
If someone was willing to maintain a comercial Linux, "A Delux version," then I imagine a users could order a cd or dvd set and have everything included.
Although, I suppose this is   outside of most average Linux users. If I had the time I wouldn't mind putting my programming skills to use putting out my own distro.

In the absence of a free alternative, I think this would be a defensible
approach, and if other agree, it may be worth lobbying for it with
Debian and/or Ubuntu.  Since I work for Sun and wrote much of the
java-access-bridge for Gnome, perhaps a less-interested party should do
the lobbying <smile>.
Agreed. It would be nice to get as many Linux distros onboard, but it would also be nice to see the bridge ship with Solaris.
I recently got to see a Sun desktop running Solaris with Gnome 2.6 and I rather liked the OS.
The great thing here that we are building with Gnome and gnopernicus is global accessibility across many Unix and Unix-like operating systems with a common user interface.
Only a couple of years ago I only had accessibility to Windows via Jaws and some access to Linux with speakup. Now, thanks to gnopernicus I have used FreeBSD, Solaris, and Linux all with the same screen reader, desktop, and apps.

regards

Bill

Thomas Ward wrote:

>Hi,
>While I think everyone can agree adding a Java VM and java access bridge
>would be a good thing there are licensing issues that would have to be
>resolved first.
>

>



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