From: Markus Mohrhard [markus.mohrh...@googlemail.com]
Sent: Friday, March 08, 2013 3:13 AM

>Thanks a lot for your effort rising awareness of these problems. If
>you think it is a general problem that we are not paying enough
>attention on accessibility support in new dialogs it would be nice if
>you could give us some examples so that we can discuss how we can
>improve our workflow in the future.

Markus,

I will try to do exactly that and find an appropriate spot on the Wiki to 
clarify design and development requirements for support of Assistive 
Technologies and accessibility, probably with some linkage to standards work of 
the cognizant organizations.

In the meanwhile, testing and understanding requirements for including 
accessibility is well within the grasp of ANY developer or user of 
LibreOffice--we just don't think about it.

Here is my simple guide--and I am not being flippant--this is a reasonable 
demonstration.
 
So, if on a GNOME Linux, activate ORCA, on Windows JAWS or NVDA, on OSX 
VoiceOver--then launch LibreOffice.

Now close your eyes (or put on a blind fold) and try to write a document--I 
won't suggest a spreadsheet, or presentation, or even an illustration although 
why not?

How does that work for you? Is the new Template Manager effective?

If we are meeting our responsibilities as supporters of 
LibreOffice--developers, designers, QA, even users--we should be equally 
effective working with the Assistive Technologies support exposed with UNO 
Accessibility API as with moving a cursor with a mouse.  Anything less and we 
are not meeting our responsibilities. If the GUI can not be made to talk, and 
does not follow reasonable hierarchical structures AT support falters. 

Put another way, if we can not drive the interface without peeking, how is 
someone who does not have that option to cope?  

Additionally, think of the challenge if you can not point with a mouse or type 
on the keyboard, are we helping those users.

Stuart

Cross posting to the devs, and accessibility lists, so apologize now to all who 
receive multiple copies of this post. And again this is not intended to be 
flippant response, I am simply asking folks to consider accessibility aspect of 
their individual design and development efforts.




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