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- From: Peter Korn <korn chutzpah org>
- To: Joseph Scheuhammer <clown alum mit edu>, Gnome Accessibility List <gnome-accessibility-list gnome org>, Robert Cole <rkcole72984 gmail com>
- Subject: 0
- Date: Fri, 14 Feb 2014 09:32:51 -0800
Joseph,
In addition to getting input from the current users, I think it may be
helpful to think about the impacts of different vision impairments, and
what features may best help folks with those differences. For example,
some people experience a loss of central vision (e.g. macular
degeneration), while others a loss of peripheral vision (e.g. glaucoma).
To help answer your questions about whether these settings are best
provided independently of one another (or linked together), it would be
good to seek opinions from folks across the spectrum of vision impairments.
Regards,
Peter
On 2/14/2014 8:25 AM, Joseph Scheuhammer wrote:
Improvements to the magnifier preferences dialog have been suggested.
A mockup, courtesy of Allan Day, can be found at the following URL:
https://raw.github.com/gnome-design-team/gnome-mockups/master/system-settings/universal-access/zoom-and-filters.png
One of the additions is a check box labelled "Keep keyboard focus in
view" that is on the left hand "Zoom" panel. This is for toggling the
activation of focus/caret tracking.
The gnome-shell magnifier supports tracking modes for widget focus,
caret focus, and mouse pointer movement. Furthermore, these are
independent of each other. However, the proposed dialog combines
them. The radio buttons above the check box list different mouse
tracking modes, i.e. "Push with pointer", "Follow pointer", and "Keep
pointer centered". Whatever mode is set for the mouse will be used
for both focus and caret tracking.
The question is what do magnifier users want or need regarding
tracking types? Are there use cases for having the types of tracking
independent of each other? Or, if the user chooses "centered" for
one, that applies to all? We would really like user input.
To give a better idea of what this is about, I'll be the use case,
since I use a magnifier on occasion, and at a low magnification
factor (1.75x). My preference is "push" for mouse and caret tracking,
but "centered" for focus tracking.
With respect to the mouse, I prefer it behave as close as possible to
the non-magnifier experience. On a standard desktop, the mouse
moves, not the contents. The mouse tracking mode that comes the
closest to that experience is "push", where the contents do not move
in the magnified view until the mouse abuts up against an edge. When
it does, the contents do move, but only enough to bring them into view.
For myself, the text caret works in a similar way. When using a word
processor, the caret generally moves in small increments -- left,
right, up, and down -- and I prefer that the contents not move until
they need to.
However, when using the keyboard to tab-navigate around the UI, widget
focus frequently jumps over large distances. For example, I may be
near the bottom of the screen editing a text document when I use
alt+tab to use the task switcher. Focus moves (warps) to the centre
of the screen, far from where I was typing. I need to reorientto the
new screen contents (my point of regard, so to speak), and, in my
case, that is helped by centering the widget that just acquired focus
-- I prefer "centered" tracking for changes in widget focus. Trying
to preserve little or no movement in the contents is pointless here
since focus is likely to move large distances.
Now, that's just me, and I stress that I am **not**putting my
preferences forward as any kind of standard. In fact, quite the
opposite. Those are my user preferences. I fully expect other
magnifier users to have different ones, and we would like to know
yours so that we fully understand the needs and can incorporate them
into the UI being designed: Do you use the same tracking mode for
focus, caret, and mouse or different modes for each? And if you use
different modes, why?
Thanks.
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