On 29/05/11 09:02, Jonathan Marsden wrote:
On 05/27/2011 09:26 AM, Pia wrote:

..., but in open source, if you have a very small group represented,
you have to get your hands dirty first in order to sufficiently
understand the situation well enough to come up with good system
specifications and a reasonable roadmap in a reasonable time frame.
So, what we were doing in discussing details and wanting to actually
test a few things was just that and what you originally were
complaining about.  Assessing the situation would allow us to know
what we can take from Ubuntu's road map and what has to be adjusted.
How about sharing Ubuntu's current official accessibility roadmap with
the Lubuntu developers, as a start?  I note that

   https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Accessibility/Links

does not seem to me to include a pointer to it, at least not by any name
recognizably similar to "Ubuntu Accessibility Roadmap", which seems an
unfortunate omission.
not a roadmap as such, but I have started drafting a document on the Ubuntu infrastructure for accessibility
http://pad.ubuntu.com/AccessibilityInfrastructure
This will get transferred to the wiki at some point when it is nearly complete and the most glaring errors have been fixed. I don't know much about Lubuntu, only that it is based on something called LXDE as a window manager and is targeted at really old computers. Looking at lubuntu.net it seems to be based on GTK, so I imagine just installing gnome-orca will pull in speech dispatcher at-spi2 and espeak, install onboard and you have an on-screen keyboard too. Does it use ubiquity for the installer?

Alan

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