Luke Yelavich wrote:

So how do totally blind people navigate this? Speech is impossible
at this time I am sure.
Yes, generated speech is impossible in the boot loader, though we were talking about using recorded speech files. However, I'm not sure it's worth doing, because once you have selected the fact that you want AT features, the only thing left to do most often is select you language, and so the recorded files would basically be an English voice saying 'Select language X' where X is one of ~40 languages, most of which are not supported in Festival anyway.

Currently the CD works like this: You start it up and you get a welcome screen. You can either just press Enter and it will boot completely to Gnome, no questions asked. Alternatively you can press F2 to select a language, F3 for low-end VGA and F4 for various other HW options. Once you have selected those settings, you press Enter and the system boots with no further questions asked.

We plan to modify it in the following way: You boot the CD and get the greeter screen and a single beep. In addition to the other options you can now also press F4 for the AT menu. When the menu opens, you hear another beep. On that menu you can select with arrows+enter or simply press a number from 1-7+enter. Upon selection an option you would hear a double beep as confirmation.

So, a blind user (having read some basic instructions on the web -- or in an accompanying letter in braille ...). Would insert the CD, boot and wait for the first beep. She would then press F4 (having this information ahead of time) and hear the second beep. Then she would press 3+enter and hear a double beep confirming that the AT system has been enabled. Finally she would press enter to start the boot. The system would then boot completely to Gnome without further questions. Gnopernicus would be enabled from start and would read out the contents of the screen. I think that's fairly simple, and certainly more accessible than any mainstream OS I know of.

Optionally, we can do the same for language, so you could press 'F2', followed by 'de'+enter for German. Of course Festival only has support for a handful of languages anyway AFAIK.

Also, optionally later on, we could add better support for low-vision users at the boot prompt. You could press F4+2 for the low vision option, and that could then change the fonts in gfxboot to very large, which would then be helpful in selecting language, etc.

Have you looked at language/keyboard selection to be spoken? Is d-i still doing this, or is this done with gfxboot/UbuntuExpress?
gfxboot will handle the language question and UbuntuExpress will remember your choice (but also allow you to change it AFAIR). So if you picked the wrong language during boot, you could still change it while installing AFAIU.

- Henrik

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