* Dennis Payne <[email protected]> [2021-05-08 21:40]: > On Sat, 2021-05-08 at 20:52 +0300, Jean Louis wrote: > > * Dennis Payne <[email protected]> [2021-05-08 19:20]: > > > Connecting at a lower level would probably give worse results. For > > > Gnome software for example, I don't believe they write text using > > > the X > > > Windows functions. Instead they handle that themselves and send the > > > image result to X. Additionally X Windows is generally on the way > > > out > > > with Wayland being the new thing. > > > > I get it. > > > > But I don't think that blind users would like to switch to bleeding > > edge software. > > RHEL, Fedora, and Ubuntu use Wayland right now. X Windows is basically > in maintenance mode. The proposal I was referencing suggested moving > the accessibility layer lower in the X windows stack. If you started > working on that now, it probably wouldn't matter because X Windows will > have a small market share. (If it even worked which as I said is > unlikely because of the way libraries make use of X Windows.) > > But if you think you can do better, I'd be happy to be proven wrong. I > just don't think Wayland is bleeding edge anymore.
Maybe I used wrong word, I use X.org not the original X Window System. I fully understand your proposal, I wish it could be so how you explained it. I would bring it even more down to underlying functions in the kernel as well. Speech system should be embedded fundamentally. Anything that is displayed on the screen should have capability to be spoken out, including kernel messages, just anything. Just any output of text should have possibility to be tracked by the operating system so that speech functions may be enabled or disabled. A screen reader should not be just an application, it should be fundamental part of the operating system with the API so that various other software may re-use the text. As there is huge software there is no standard that I know how OS should be defined in the terms of accessibility. I think that both text readers and speech recognition should be built-in. RHEL, Fedora and Ubuntu are not fully free operating systems, so that is first thing that I look upon when choosing about them. When contributing, first is to contribtue to free software distributions as here listed: https://www.gnu.org/distros/free-distros.html From: https://www.gnu.org/distros/common-distros.html ,---- | Ubuntu maintains specific repositories of nonfree software, and | Canonical expressly promotes and recommends nonfree software under the | Ubuntu name in some of their distribution channels. Ubuntu offers the | option to install only free packages, which means it also offers the | option to install nonfree packages too. In addition, the version of | Linux, the kernel, included in Ubuntu contains firmware blobs. `---- -- Jean Take action in Free Software Foundation campaigns: https://www.fsf.org/campaigns Sign an open letter in support of Richard M. Stallman https://stallmansupport.org/ https://rms-support-letter.github.io/ _______________________________________________ libreplanet-discuss mailing list [email protected] https://lists.libreplanet.org/mailman/listinfo/libreplanet-discuss
