Re: GNOME A11y: where do we need to improve? (Want input by 25-Jan)
- From: Francesco Fumanti <francesco fumanti gmx net>
- To: Willie Walker <William Walker Sun COM>
- Cc: gnome-accessibility-list gnome org
- Subject: Re: GNOME A11y: where do we need to improve? (Want input by 25-Jan)
- Date: Mon, 21 Jan 2008 14:47:58 +0100
Hello,
First of all, thanks for making this possible.
At 11:11 AM -0500 1/17/08, Willie Walker wrote:
One of the most important things for us to do right now is identify
where we need to improve. This may result in positive things such as
funding opportunities and the like.
Over the coming week, please set aside some time to look at
http://live.gnome.org/Accessibility/GetInvolved. It contains a large
list of stuff to do, but it represents a pretty complete list of things
people have mentioned over the past few years.
What I'd like you to do is look at the page with these things in mind:
1) If there is something missing from the list, please make a
suggestion. I'm looking for concrete ideas. Things such as "we need to
do more for people with hearing disabilities" are less likely to get
addressed than specific tasks such as "develop close captioning software
for x, y, z." On the same front, something like "Be more researchy" is
more of a section where specific research and advanced development
topics should live.
I have added the "Improve efficiency of the GNOME desktop for
mouse-only users" to the above mentioned wiki page. In fact, GNOME is
lacking (or did I miss it?) an onscreen keyboard targeted
specifically at people that have no difficulty to move the
mouse/pointer (regardless of whether it is a standard mouse or some
adaptive hardware like a headpointer), but are not able to use a
hardware keyboard.
For users that have difficulties to use the mouse button, there is
mousetweaks that should fill the gap. Unfortunately, I have not found
any keyboard on linux as efficient as the commercial product that I
am using on the other operating system:
There is dasher that is reputed to have a good prediction engine; but
it seems to lack the possibilities to control the desktop.
There is gok, which seems to be rather targeted at users that can not
efficiently use the pointer. It has word completion without word
prediction. The keyboard is not resizable,...
Should dasher be enhanced, should the composer in gok be enhanced, or
should a new project aimed at the mouse only users be started from
scratch? I don't know.
By the way, the GetInvolved page mentions porting gok to python. Why the port?
Cheap Head Mice? The adaptive Headpointers that I know of, use
special reference items weird by the user to track his movement. I
wonder whether a simple camera (webcam) working without a reference
item can be accurate enough to use it as headpointer. Does anybody
have any experience with "reference-less" headpointing?
About writing drivers for headpointers: do you have any headpointers
in mind? Some headpointers (usually the more expensive models)
present themselves as a normal mouse to the computer and consequently
should work with the mouse driver shipped by the operating: this has
the advantage of not requiring a specific driver (and maybe the
disadvantage of not being customizable).
Another point I am wondering about: Am I right when I think that
there is a standard about making the computer accessible for users
that can only use the keyboard!? If it is true, maybe that a standard
for people that can only use the mouse (with and without buttons)
could also be useful.
2) If you were someone who suggested one of the ideas, please help fill
out the details. You obviously mentioned it because you thought it was
important, so please make sure it is represented well on the page.
If anything is not clear in the "Improve efficiency of the GNOME
desktop for mouse-only users" part of the GetInvolved page, please
let me know and I will try to improve it.
3) Look at the list. What are the top 5 to 10 things that need doing on
the list, including stuff you may have added? Write your top choices
down. Send them to me.
Unfortunately, I don't have much knowledge about the different
solutions available for the various disabilities, and the state of
these solutions. Consequently a top 10 list from my part would not
make much sense.
3) Think about where you may be able to step up and help and your
availability.
I could exchange my ideas with the developer, test what he
produces,... (but I will not be able to do the coding)
About the availability: currently I am quite busy, but I hope it will
be better in a few months.
Best regards.
Francesco
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