Re: Gnome and support for the visually impaired
- From: Bill Haneman <Bill Haneman Sun COM>
- To: Dave Mielke <dave mielke cc>
- Cc: gnome-accessibility-list gnome org
- Subject: Re: Gnome and support for the visually impaired
- Date: Fri, 30 Sep 2005 15:54:22 +0100
Dave Mielke wrote:
Hi Dave:
You are absolutely right about the case-inversion problem. Perhaps I
would have noticed if I were using braille, but it's a problem that
bites many users. Peter and I have mentioned this to the gnopernicus
team before.
It's not totally clear what the best solution is. If, for instance, we
announced when the CapsLock key changed state, I might not hear the
message or it might have gotten interrupted by some other message. If
gnopernicus announced each shift state change, would that be too
annoying? At least I might notice that pressing "shift" was causing
gnopernicus to say "lower case" (for instance) instead of "upper case".
Who would like to file the bug? I am guessing this is a gnopernicus RFE.
Bill
[quoted lines by Bill Haneman on 2005/09/30 at 09:12 +0100]
mY TOUCH TYPING IS A LITTLE
ROUGH TOO.
Please note that one of the problems you encountered, which would indeed make
an employee of a company look stupid, is that you had the case inverted, i.e.
that which should've been lowercase was in uppercase and vice versa. This is
such a simple thing, yet it'd make such a bad (and wrong) impression. It's
little things like this which users would notice because it'd make others
notice them and incorrectly perceive incompetence.
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