Re: Carrying over ATs from GDM to GNOME session (brainstorm)
- From: Willie Walker <William Walker Sun COM>
- To: Andre Nuno Soares <ans meo pt>
- Cc: gnome-accessibility-list gnome org
- Subject: Re: Carrying over ATs from GDM to GNOME session (brainstorm)
- Date: Thu, 12 Nov 2009 10:01:00 -0500
Hi André:
Thanks for joining in!
You won't get disagreement from me that what you mention would be a nice
solution. Anywhere an interface is provided to add a new user to the
system (e.g., system installation, new user dialog, etc.) is an
opportunity to enable a11y appropriately for the user. These are things
that have been on my wish list for a while. :-)
Doing this will require cooperation from the distros to add a11y
features to their installers (e.g., Ubuntu's 'speech profile') and it
will also require a11y provisions to be added to the new user dialog. I
believe both of the user interfaces to these touchpoints can be somewhat
distro-specific, however, so the solution can become somewhat complex
and likely to be error prone because not every distro is a responsible
a11y citizen.
I believe the GDM handoff to the user session tends to be somewhat
consistent across distros. As a result, I think the carry over is a
touchpoint where GNOME can provide a consistent workable solution.
Also, the GDM carry over doesn't prevent the ability to add something
such as an "Accessibility" tab to the new user account dialog or to read
accessibility preferences from LDAP (or a USB stick, your
bluetooth-enabled mobile phone, etc. -- there's been work/research going
on in this space for a long time). Instead, it should be a relatively
straightforward solution we can get to quickly. The result will vastly
improve the current out-of-the-box experience for GNOME a11y and
increase the user's chance of being able to operate independently.
So, I'd view this as more of "low hanging fruit" that we can grab while
also shooting for tighter integration with user management. I also
don't view it as something we'd end up eventually throwing away. We can
never expect all distros to provide proper accessible installs and it's
doubtful all system administrators will make sure to enable a11y
preferences properly for new users, and it's doubtful we'll see generic
electronic a11y profiles appear until the proper committees have been
formed and some W3C or OASIS group anguishes over the file format for
years, and everybody ends up just ignoring the spec anyway. ;-)
Will
Andre Nuno Soares wrote:
Hello all,
Speaking solely as a blind user, I think this issue is being looked at
the wrong way.
The thought is: "A user shouldn't have to configure accessibility in GDM
and then again in the Desktop".
But the thought should be: "why does the user need to configure
accessibility (in the Desktop) if he already exists in the system?"
Accessibility is a requirement of the user, so it should be enabled when
the user is created in the system, just like enabling the mounting of
the cd-rom drive, choosing the terminal shell or allowing sudoing to
root.
This doesn't seem very complex to implement, but I don't know of any
Gnome setup that does it, and so we end up with accessibility being
configured twice when the user logs for the first time or soon after.
This makes even more sense if you consider "roaming profiles", be it in
a campus/corporate setup or the cloud.
AFAIK this doesn't exist in Gnome yet, but gconf at least already
supports LDAP and DB backends, and I think there are already some
experiences with roaming profiles.
For GDM accessibility, the proposed keyboard shortcuts/gestures would
solve the problem.
Just my 0.02€
André
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