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Greetings again.
On Wed, Dec 19, 2007 at 11:52:55AM EST, Brian Cameron wrote:
> I would appreciate it if everybody who volunteered to be a part of the
> committee could answer the following questions.
> 
> 1) How would you like the committee to interact?  Via discussions on
>     this mailing list or via meetings?  If you think we should have
>     meetings, how often would you prefer to meet, and would you prefer
>     IRC or phone?

My first preference would be mailing lists for a few reasons. Firstly, it 
allows one to take time to think out a reply for a discussion which could get 
heated. This would allow one to be as calm as possible before attempting to 
reply to something that someone else has said. Mailing lists also negate the 
timezone issues that always arrise with realtime meetings involving people from 
all over the world.

My second preference would be IRC. I idle on IRC on two networks all the time, 
so its trivial for me to jump into a channel and participate. I can also 
provide logging of the channel in question if required.

> 2) What would you like to see the Committee be responsible for doing?
>     I would prefer specific and achievable things rather than vague
>     generalizations.

I think just about everything I would have mentioned has been said by Willie 
already. The one thing I would really like to see however, is the GNOME a11y 
folks getting more distributions involved. Ubuntu has such a good accessibility 
presence because a few of us from the Ubuntu community took it upon ourselves 
to make Ubuntu's accessibility as good as we could, in the time we had. There 
are other folks doing what they can for accessibility for other distributions, 
however some of these are not working with the core development teams for their 
distribution of choice to make accessibility technologies for GNOME and Linux 
in general, more tightly integrated into the user desktop experience. If GNOME 
and Linux accessibility is to go anywhere, integration must be a high priority 
on distribution's feature plans.

> 3) What do you see that is blocking progress (or hindering acceptance)
>     of GNOME a11y.  What do you think could be done to improve things?

We need to educate distribution vendors, developers, and usability experts, and 
tell them what we are doing, and why what we are doing is important. While this 
is not exactly what happened with Ubuntu, so many GNOME accessibility users use 
Ubuntu because Ubuntu has accessibility as a part of the core distribution, 
from the moment that the user boots the live CD. It would have been no 
different if another distribution was to have taken this approach. More 
education at the distro development level means a greater chance that 
accessibility will become an important feature set, and so on, the snowball 
effect. In this way, we are also likely to pick up a lot more users who 
discover accessibility through their distribution of choice.

> 4) Assuming that we can identify a list of tasks in the answers to the
>     above questions, would you be willing to invest time in the Committee
>     to chip in and take on tasks to make progress in these areas?

Yes. I am not likely to be able to give any time to helping GNOME accessibility 
in general, but I can continue doing my bit to raise awareness, and continue 
integration development for Ubuntu. Being a part of this committee means 
keeping abrest of the newest developments, and getting those developments into 
Ubuntu as soon as possible.
- -- 
Luke Yelavich
GPG key: 0xD06320CE 
         (http://www.themuso.com/themuso-gpg-key.txt)
Email & MSN: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Jabber: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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