[I am CC'ing this message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] since someone there might know the answer to this question.]
Hello. I used Mozilla 1.3 with enabled accessibility support already a little bit under Gnopernicus -- the GNOME screen reader -- on a Debian system. It was speaking the menus, and it also spoke the links when using TAB to navigate between links on a page. Now Mozilla 1.4 entered the Debian development distribution, and I was excited about perhaps seeing some improvements. What I see now is that mozilla 1.4 does not provide any spoken feedback at all. Not in the menus, and not on a rendered page. I double-checked, and found that mozilla 1.4 also has accessibility support enabled by default, just like 1.3 had. Now I am wondering, do I miss something? Do I perhaps need to set some environment variable to enabled proper AT-SPI/ATK usage of Mozilla? If not, can anyone explain why the new version seems to be a lot worse than 1.3 when it comes to accessibility support? Any input on this would be appreciated. -- CYa, Mario | Debian Developer <URL:http://debian.org/> | Get my public key via finger [EMAIL PROTECTED] | 1024D/7FC1A0854909BCCDBE6C102DDFFC022A6B113E44

