alan c wrote: > I do not usually use any special accessibility features, and have a > few hours to familiarise with what is offered in Kubuntu. [...]
Many thanks to Ian and Carlos for the replies! I usually use kubuntu so it would have taken me quite a time to realise that the best accessibility facilities were in Gnome. It did not take me long to try out some simple things because I already have ubuntu-desktop as one of the session options. I do not think the screen magnifier worked for me on my desktop machine, but it works well on the laptop, which is great for a good demonstration this morning. If things get taken up today I will need to find out a bit more about what the screen magnifier needs. I have been using K/Ubuntu for a couple of years now, and I know I should not be surprised at how good things can get, but I am surprised at the quality of the accessibility things! Well done everyone and a big thank you. Alan for the record, Ian said: ======================== The majority of the Accessability stuff you will find under the standard Ubuntu desktop ie the GNOME desktop. Within that you have * sticky keys * on screen keyboards for use with head pointers etc * screen readers * braille support for braille dot matrix writers * screen magnification There is currently NO support at all for Speech to Text like DragonSpeak in MS. Unfortunately, the support for all of these depends on the original projects having used an appropriate library that interfaces with the Assistive Technologies interfaces. At present this is really limited to Open Office, Evolution and GAME. Firefox should be accessable when FF 3 is launched which hopefully will be packaged into Gutsy. ======================== -- alan cocks Kubuntu user#10391 -- Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list [email protected] https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-accessibility
