mike coulombe wrote: > but if there is a real problem getting orca to work with the install > program. How about a automatic installer. <snip> I think that's a great idea especially for newbies who do want to go with the defaults. About the only setting I changed myself was the locale FInland that is. Based on that a smart installer should be able to figure out my time zone and keyboard, although there might not be a 1to1 mapping for all the other countries.
I've heard there might already be an automated deployment system for Debian, which is called I believe automated install (kickstart in Redhat). I've never used the thing, though. It would be even better if the user could customize the setup. HACking some well commented config file to do that might be an acceptable alternative similarly to apps like doxygen for C plus plus programmers or the HTML Tidy manual and config file for Web authors. Personally, you guessed it, I would rather do this via some GUI preferably mirroring that of the installer as much as is practical. The only OS in which I've done that myself and really liked it was Win98, though. For Windows users, and I guess most people are switching from windows due to the dominance and long-term development of apps like Jaws, Eloquence and Zoom Text, there's another catch. That is you cannot generally make a good accessible Windows GUI with Linux GUis like TK or GTK, or at least I've never seen any. Maybe a cross platform solution with ports to various OSes and GUI libs, if the users would like to do this customization before they boot to the OS. Or some console affair written with a GUI screen readre friendly text mode and ANSI C. AS to what's GUI reader friendly, little or no ASCII graphics and using the standard cursor or something that's at least shaped like a vertical bar for easy tracking. Or if the live CD approach is prevalent, one could do this customization in some specialty distro. Maybe it would fit on most USB sticks and you could at the very least easily write out the changes on some removable media. On the other hand, if the live CD could be made to speak the installer, most people who don't have to deploy Linux on multiple machines, could just as well use the speaking installer directly. Regarding the defaults, if this is specific to folks needing accessibility, I think the settings should reflect that. For ages I've been wishing for a LInux distro that just worked in terms of accessibility. SOmething with as many CLI and GUI readers, multi-lingual speech synths and accessible versions (GTK2 or self-voicing) as is practical. Too bad the Oralux project hasn't advanced all that much. I think it would be great if Gnome had the assistive technology support enabled by default. I cannot see why it already doesn't, in fact, unless accessibility is a major performance or stability hit. OS X has the right attitude in this, in that a user can just start using Voice Over, and when he or she does that, speech, full keyboard access and the accessibility API just works. In other words, no need to configure anything. Besides, configuring is difficult for many if you don't have speech or at least good full-screen magnification preferrably with font smoothing (for truetype stuff). -- With kind regards Veli-Pekka Tätilä ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) Accessibility, game music, synthesizers and programming: http://www.student.oulu.fi/~vtatila/ -- Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list [email protected] https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-accessibility
