I possibly would rank software speech above Braille, its probably useful to 
more people. Don't know so much for desktop and server systems, but certainly 
on laptops serial ports are disappearing (if not fully disappeared) so there 
are cases where hardware speech output is not an option even if you have the 
hardware synth.

I think this is just a difference of view, you seem to be taking the route of 
what groups are enabled rather than how many individuals might use it.

I possibly would agree with you more if speakup could work with USB to serial 
convertors or with USB synths. Alternatively are there other screen readers 
which may work with USB to serial convertors or USB synths (eg. as YASR is user 
space would that work with USB convertors, although YASR I think is no longer 
developed).

Michael whapples
On 3 Nov 2011, at 14:42, John G. Heim wrote:

> I rank the accessibility nees like this:
> 
> 1. Speakup kernel modules
> 2. Braille support (brltty)
> 3. Software speech (espeak and espeakup)
> 4. Beet when boot is finished
> 
> The reason i rank braille ahead of software speech is for deaf/blind systems 
> administrators. If you're blind, you can get a hardware synth but if ther is 
> no braille support, systems admins who are both deaf and blind are out of 
> luck.
> 
> I hope people don't think I'm exaggerating when I talk about people losing 
> their jobs due to accessibility problems. Being a blind systems administrator 
> is a constant struggle with accessibility problems. How do I install Windows 
> 7? Is the new VMWare interface accessible? How do I rescue a crashed machine? 
> I'm not saying someone would get fired right on the spot if their grml CD 
> doesn't speak. But what happens is that tasks like installing Win7 and  
> rescuing crashed systems get assigned to other people. When layoffs come 
> around, the blind systems administrator is the one to go because he is the 
> least important member of the team.
> 
> I know grml can't be all things to all people. But I would hope the grml 
> developers would be at least hesitant to add another brick to the wall of 
> accessibility problems disabled systems administrators struggle to climb over 
> every day.
> 
> ----- Original Message ----- From: "Michael Whapples" <[email protected]>
> To: <[email protected]>
> Sent: Wednesday, November 02, 2011 7:00 PM
> Subject: Re: [Grml] How are blind grml users handling currentwebtechnologies?
> 
> 
>> John, I would agree with the list of what would be needed (personal view). 
>> The only additional one I can imagine some might ask for might be emacspeak, 
>> however possibly should that be included on a live CD, I would probably go 
>> with not really as speakup can work (may be not as well) with emacs or vim, 
>> so its not like you are lacking access to a decent editor. Anyway, should 
>> emacspeak be desired then it could be downloaded, or may be its something 
>> for a custom GRML CD.
>> 
>> Also, I don't know that I could commit to testing every release (as I 
>> mentioned speakup in ArchLinux is not working on my computers and I think 
>> its a speakup issue not a issue with the packaging) but may be let us know 
>> here on this list as well when you want testing of accessibility and I will 
>> do what I can.
>> 
>> Michael Whapples
>> On -10/01/37 20:59, John G. Heim wrote:
>>> From: "Christian Hofstaedtler" <[email protected]>
>>> To: <[email protected]>
>>> 
>>> 
>>>> Can you (or someone else interested in this) draft a list of things
>>>> we would need to do/ship to actually have working accesibility support
>>> <> (for you)?
>>>> This includes everything that might be there right now. I myself
>>>> have never seen such a setup, so please be explicit.
>>> 
>>> I'd better ask around before I give you a definative list. I think I know 
>>> what to tell you but I'll check  it out to make sure. I own a hardware 
>>> speech synthesizer so I think for me, just including the speakup kernel 
>>> modules would be enough.  And that code is now in the mainstream kernel 
>>> code. You don't have to do anything but check the boxes for it when you're 
>>> configuring a kernel.
>>> 
>>> On a debian system, to get software speech, you need the speakup modules 
>>> and you need to install two packages, espeak and espeakup. To get braille, 
>>> you need the brltty package.
>>> 
>>>> accessibility, I assume it's not really useful to actually have the 
>>>> software on the ISO at all; so not having QA here is not really an
>>>> option.
>>> 
>>> I will do that.  All I'll need is to be notified when I need to test. I'm 
>>> guessing that it wouldn't be a problem if it took me a few days to get to 
>>> it. I mean, sometimes I take vacation.  But most of the time, if I was 
>>> notified that I had to test a new version, I would get to it within 24 
>>> hours. And I'll be a good tester. I can use my employers resources to test 
>>> so you'll never hear from me something like I couldn't get to it because my 
>>> network connection was down. And I have a hardware speech synthesizer and a 
>>> braille display. So I could test the full range of accessibility features.
>>> 
>>>> If somebody steps up to do the work and/or the list, we might reconsider.
>>> 
>>> Well, you've already got somebody. I'm not the most knowledgable grml user 
>>> in the world. I've used only the live CD as a rescue disk. But I have 
>>> plenty of hardware that I can install grml on. I don't know if I'll need a 
>>> machine with grml installed to the disk but I can set that up tonight. And 
>>> I'll start asking around to make sure I know what to tell you to include.
>>> 
>>> 
>>> 
>>> 
>> 
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