According to Gabe Vega: <snip> # Linux Accessability is not viable simply because # people are Wishy Washie, it has nothing to do with money. <snip>
With an attitude like that, it's no wonder at all why you have trouble finding people who want to work for you. YOu have made it crystal clear that you think blind people just don't want to work, but I would submit that with an attitude like that, most people would rather work for someone who doesn't share your negative views. BTW, I have quite a bit of trouble with your acessment that Linux accessibility is not viable, but yet you say you hire people who work with Linux accessibility. I have found Linux to be quite viable, both from an accessibility/usability standpoint when related to use of screen readers and other assistive technologies and from an overall usability standpoint as related to average users just sitting down in front of a Linux computer and getting things done. As a matter of fact, I have used Linux exclusively for nearly 5 years, and have used it more than 75% of the time for the 5 years before that, and I absolutely refuse to look back, even so far as to run Windows or MacOS in a virtual machine. There is just nothing I find that I miss from the days of running Windows that much, and everything I need to do on a computer can be done on any Linux operating system, and I don't have to be a sit at home all day geek, as you so eloquently put it, in order to do those things. Furthermore, I recently showed someone with little to no computer knowledge at all how to plug in a thumb drive running Linux and use it to get on the internet to look for jobs, read e-mail and much more, and I didn't have to take a lot of time doing it. Granted, he didn't need a screen reader, but my point is that he learned how to use Linux, and he had no computer skills to speak of. Linux is viable. Linux accessibility is viable. Linux is freedom, and Linux freedom is practical and useful. In a later post to this thread, you posted a BTW with a link to your job site. Well, I'm not sure about anyone else, but although I do want to work, and although I do want to make a living supporting Linux and building computers with Linux on them, both talking and non-talking for *anyone* who needs one, I feel that with the attitudes you present in this thread, I would much rather work for someone else or simply do business for myself. I leave you with this question. Why would I want to work for you with regard to Linux or Linux accessibility when it would seem from where I'm sitting that you as a potential imployer don't take it seriously? My skills are put to better use for a person or company who does take Linux seriously, as I could tell you nothing about the state of proprietary operating systems and screen readers today, and don't want to have to learn/relearn such crap. ~Kyle http://kyle.tk/ -- "Kyle? ... She calls her cake, Kyle?" Out of This World, season 2 episode 21 - "The Amazing Evie" -- Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list [email protected] https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-accessibility
