Re: [orca-list] Our list will be moving to Discourse
- From: Jace Kattalakkis <khalfang1366 gmail com>
- To: orca-list gnome org
- Subject: Re: [orca-list] Our list will be moving to Discourse
- Date: Tue, 13 Sep 2022 18:20:17 +0100
Kyle...
Look at what forum software your link uses. Look at the lack of
features, the broken features that pun/panbb cannot address due to it
being insanely old and, frankly, insanely bare bones. I can spin up the
same code and get just a forum. No PM, no shoutbox, nothing but a basic
forum.
On your linked audiogames.net forum, users (me inclued) have actually
been calling for that forum to move to something more modern and ditch
the outdated, too basic and barebones code. I mean, on your link, you
don't have PM notifications, or working email systems, it errors out
when you send one and you don't get confirmation if it sent or not. You
don't have a way to track edits of posts, so I could post something, you
respond and I edit my post to say pineapple belongs on pizza, then edit
it again to something completely off topic, and unless someone got the
original post before I edited it, everyone's SOL on what I originally
put. That's been an issue with trolls doing that exact thing recently
over there.
I mean, I can spin up a Discourse forum docker instance and have things
Pun/PanBB can only dream of. Sure, there's a lot about Discourse I'm up
here on the fence about. And I don't like the tagging system IMO, if
you're putting a topic in a category, and, yes, this may well be
possible with digging around the user preferences, please tell me if
this can be done, but say I want to subscribe to an entire category,
let's say for argument's sake Orca got its own category on Gnome's
Discourse.
I'd want to subscribe to only that category to get emails and respond to
it that way. Not every tiny thing. yes. I know about the user
preferences, but I don't feel like I should have to log in and go
through a web forum to change what does or doesn't get sent to my inbox
or folders.
I'm still maintaining, as well, it's a lot simpler and quicker, to ire
up Mutt/Thunderbird/webmail/etc and just fire off a quick reply, rather
than log into a forum, find the topic, start making a reply. Yes. I
know, I can just click the link in the email and it takes me there. But
what I don't know....is does that automatically log me in or not?I
On 9/13/22 17:36, Kyle via orca-list wrote:
According to Christian Schoepplein:
moving the list to a webbased service will be the most inaccessible
and most complicated solution, especialy if it is a discussion
plattform for and with blind users :-(. Allthough I know the
advantages of those webforums my expirence is that many blind people
will not longer use those plattforms because they are to complicated,
timeintensive and many unecessary content is presented on those
sites. We tried to move mailinglists for blind people to webbased
solutions years ago and they are dead now, the people do not longer
use them :-(.
Just to play devil's advocate for a minute ...
https://forum.audiogames.net/
has been online for many years, and many blind people use it. I don't
think they have an email list.
I do have my reasons for preferring email lists over web-based forums
which I have mentioned, most notably the fact that they are easier to
keep track of and easier to follow, but accessibility isn't the make
or break issue, as accessibility of web-based applications has greatly
improved over the years, and forum software is no exception.
I'll try Discurse ofcourse, but I feel this is the wrong plattform
for us :-(. The people that made this decission did not have
accessiblity and inclusion in mind :-(.
Interestingly, Discourse has been touted as a highly accessible option
as web forum software goes, right up until yesterday. Actually, I can
see where a web forum could be a much better platform for discussing a
screen reader than email. Consider the email options available to us
if something goes wrong with Orca and Thunderbird or Evolution. Maybe
it's only my opinion, but I find it much easier to sign into a web
forum via w3m in a terminal or text-only console than trying to set up
the likes of Mutt or even Alpine. Of course the forum software would
need to be able to take text-based browsing into account, just like
wiki software for displaying documentation,i.e. to install Arch Linux
just as an example, but if done right, it definitely works in those
emergency cases. Of course for something like that, Matrix, IRC or
some other form of real-time chat may be the best of all options, but
I can certainly see the benefit of having a web-based solution as well.
I haven't tried this in pure text mode, but it does seem that
something that works very similar to groups.io is the gold standard
here. If Discourse can do this, then it is obviously the best option,
since it is fully free and open source, and is self-hosted rather than
running on a specific company's website. The major advantage to
groups.io is that it is fully web-based and fully email-based at the
same time. I can join and leave groups via the web and email, and I
can read every list I'm subscribed to and post on them both ways
interchangeably. In fact, everything they do is fully usable both ways
as far as I know. So if something goes horribly wrong with Orca, and I
find myself in a terminal shell only, as long as I have access to w3m
and either Speakup or Fenrir, I should be able to sign into the
website and post to the list. Perhaps this web and email-based type of
solution is what the GNOME folks are going for here, and if so, this
could actually be a good thing. The email features of Discourse do
look a little clunky to me from what I've been reading, but we'll have
to see how things go I guess. For now, I'll probably play a little
with it on one of my servers just to see how things work. The good
news is that accessibility isn't the biggest problem here, just some
ease of use considerations, especially as it relates to the ability to
track discussions.
~Kyle
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Orca wiki: https://wiki.gnome.org/Projects/Orca
Orca documentation: https://help.gnome.org/users/orca/stable/
GNOME Universal Access guide:
https://help.gnome.org/users/gnome-help/stable/a11y.html
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