I can tell you exactly how well orca will work in a thin client environment and I can explain why. Orca requires a thick client to work at all, and it requires broad band access. Without those two components in place it will not work at all. This is why. The other name for thin client is dumb terminal. That means you get a keyboard; a screen, a network connection, and nothing else. No memory; no hard drive, no floppies no speakers, no connection for refreshable braille display, and no way to do screen magnification without additional hardware. With a thick client also known as a pc equipped with all the dangerous stuff listed above the thin client/dumb terminal hasn't got, maybe orca can run provided it can talk to the environment on the other end through a pipe. Well jaws and window-eyes work that way at least require pipes. I know about this stuff because a system that will be expanding in the coming years uses citrix where I work and they're most likely going to take it to narrow band so screen reader users will need to use dos or command line linux if required to access that system. Why dos rather than windows and why command line instead of X in Linux? Simple, all that pixel grabbing the graphical user environments do to figure out what to communicate to you takes up band width since they're pulling it off the net constantly. Dos and Linux ommand line applications only need characters not pixels and for every symbol on the screen to get generated that's 143 fewer pieces of information for dos and command line linux than it is for any of the graphical user interfaces. If I'm not mistaken 12x12 pixels in a character but I probably ought to take the smallest screen resolution and do the math on that vertical*horizontal/2,000. All of this stuff was known and documented as far back as 2001 and put out on the web. I found a paper by a writer from R.N.I.B. with this information in it earlier this year. The reason for using narrow band is to help security. With minimal resources available and minimal speeds possible because of minimal resources a network take over even by someone who managed to tap into the right network cable becomes infeasible.
On Tue, 2 Oct 2007, Luke Yelavich wrote: > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- > Hash: SHA1 > > On Tue, Oct 02, 2007 at 08:12:17AM EST, Ian Pascoe wrote: >> Hi >> >> Can anyone confirm whether Edubuntu, which I believe ships with the Gnome >> desktop, has Orca and associated components pre-packaged within the Live CD, >> or if it has to be downloaded afterwards? > > I believe that orca does come on the edubuntu CD, but I am not sure how well, > if at all, it > works in a thin client environment. > - -- > Luke Yelavich > GPG key: 0xD06320CE > (http://www.themuso.com/themuso-gpg-key.txt) > Email & MSN: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Jabber: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- > Version: GnuPG v1.4.6 (GNU/Linux) > > iD8DBQFHAZrAjVefwtBjIM4RAiWrAKDcvzB4mWNwLR2qNB10lZQy5/qITACfcDOP > GWZgyckYdjzYQ14dCAzgLPc= > =hj65 > -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- > > -- > Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-accessibility > -- Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list [email protected] https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-accessibility
