blind people have been using emacspeak for several years, that has a 
learning curve but accessibility problems are missing since the author 
of the environment is blind as well and works at the googleplex.  
Messing around with libreoffice until there's enough accessibility 
customization included in the system is unlikely to be a reliable 
productivity tool.  Latest version of emacspeak is 37.00.  Latest 
version of libreoffice is 4, go figure and guess which package has had 
more developer support working on it.  If you guess emacspeak, you're 
wrong.

On Tue, 23 Apr 2013, Krishnakant Mane wrote:

> hello all,
> Now I am in a fix.
> I did upgrade to Libre Office 4.0 and find it very good in terms of
> performance.
> But till date I haven't had any luck for disabling Unity menu integration.
> I wish to have access to file, edit, view ... menus like before.
> I will be conducting a massive workshop in a couple of weeks and don't wish
> blind students to use any difficult versions.
> Should I downgrade and how?
> or is there really a solution where I can just disable the menu integration
> specifically for Libre Office?
> happy hacking.
> Krishnakant.
> 
> 

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
jude <jdash...@shellworld.net>
Microsoft, windows is accessible. why do blind people need screen readers?


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