There are places on the Internet where it says that since Debian is the
premier accessible distribution, the debian-accessibility list is the
default location to access accessibility information.

I find that to be so.

His announcement, especially considering how very terse it was, certainly
wasn't tedious to me.

If it were very long and weekly, I would agree.

From

The Debian-Accessibility mailing list is the central point of communication
for Debian-Accessibility. It serves as a forum for potential, as well as
current, users of the Debian system who do have special needs. *Additionally,
it is used to coordinate development efforts around the various topics of
Accessibility. *

Project goals
Bring authors of different projects with similar goals together.

It's even one of the Project goals of this list.

The Project goals match the information that's elsewhere, that is a list
where blind users can find discussion of open source accessible Linux.

The Project goals are generous, and inclusive of those who are trying to
help the community of those helping the community that needs accessibility.

I was proud to belong to such a project, even though I only test things, it
was a very good project the way the Project Goals say.

Regards,

David



On Mon, Jul 18, 2022 at 10:34 AM Samuel Thibault <[email protected]>
wrote:

> D.J.J. Ring, Jr., le lun. 18 juil. 2022 10:27:19 -0400, a ecrit:
> > Didier's email was just information, and I do not see any recent emails
> from
> > him mentioning Slint,
>
> He keeps repeating it on the list, it's not that often, but it's often
> enough that in the end it becomes tedious. I'm not sending mails to the
> slint, redhat, etc. mailing lists to tell them whenever Debian gets
> new features to be tested. The slint mailing lists should be more than
> enough to send such announcements.
>
> Samuel
>
>

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