Re: An Open Letter to Oracle on the Topic Of Accessibility
- From: Eitan Isaacson <eitan monotonous org>
- To: Kenny Hitt <kenny hittsjunk net>
- Cc: gnome-accessibility-list gnome org
- Subject: Re: An Open Letter to Oracle on the Topic Of Accessibility
- Date: Mon, 22 Feb 2010 13:18:30 -0800
On Mon, 2010-02-22 at 14:49 -0600, Kenny Hitt wrote:
> Hi.
> On Mon, Feb 22, 2010 at 11:53:24AM +0100, Samuel Thibault wrote:
> > Mmm, Even free software projects do have such top-down control
> > structures. For instance in Debian you're not supposed to leave an
> > architecture apart when you package an application, and critical bugs on
> > them are release-critical and will get your package out if you don't fix
> > them.
> >
> > > Another way of saying this is that the more application developers
> > > have to think about "accessibility" as a discrete, separate phenomenon that
> > > needs to be taken into account, the more accessibility is likely to lose,
> > > despite constant "education" efforts and repair strategies to deal with the
> > > deluge of regressions.
> >
> > I think there are a couple of things that could be done.
> >
> > - in glade, some automatic tests could be done: for instance, if a
> > button doesn't have _any_ text attached to it, glade could warn the
> > developper.
> > - like in the Debian case with architectures, accessibility regressions
> > should be marked as release critical. Yes, only regressions. Debian
> > doesn't require an application to work on all architectures, but it
> > cares about regressions, which means that things only improve, except
> > for new packages. However, if in gnome an application is superseded
> > by another, it should also be release critical that the newer is at
> > least as accessible. In all cases, the
> > http://library.gnome.org/devel/accessibility-devel-guide/nightly/
> > URL should be reminded. I believe it's a way to get in people mind
> > that it is a "must do", not only a "should do".
> >
> > Samuel
>
> Thank you. You did a much better job than me at explaining the issue I have
> with Gnome accessibility. If the Gnome board would only make a small
> policy change, accessibility would stop going backwards.
>
Accessibility is definitely seen as a priority by GNOME leadership. I
agree with you that there needs to be more stringent rules for GNOME
applications. I believe the folks to lobby regarding this are the
release team, even though I know that they are also concerned about
accessibility. What would be even better is if someone who is a11y
oriented would join the release team. I think the new module inclusion
process[1] should include formal a11y requirements. Accessibility should
also find itself in the release schedule[2], just as i18n does.
Eitan.
1. http://live.gnome.org/ReleasePlanning/ModuleProposing
2. http://live.gnome.org/ReleasePlanning
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