heh. yeah, right. "gold standard"? more like the 1 troy oz. of gold required to 
buy it!

Now, as for which is better? Neither! each can do some things the other can't. 
However, NVDA is quickly catching up to the capabilities of JAWS (and already 
has a substantially greater user base). 
Now, as for the screen reader keystroke commonality among the various screen 
readers? not entirely sure that would be possible. NVDA and jaws are close. 
ORCA (for Linux) can be customized similarly, but its a lot of work. The nice 
thing I like about BrlTTY, ORCA, emacspeak or some of the other Linux based 
accessibility tools is that separate drivers don't have to be installed in 
order to make an external braille device work. They just work (same for apple, 
btw). Now, I have used both BrlTTY and ORCA since Ubuntu 10.04 and had very 
little issues with them. SOme things might get a bit quirky, but are reasonably 
stable. On windows, NVDA is getting better, but the issue there isn't the 
screen reader (either jaws or NVDA), its the OS (which is a FUBAR Kludge IMHO). 
So, in a lot of ways, we are better off with the Open Development environment, 
a greater access to some tools and the ability to share without having to let 
the evil overlord know what it is we want to do. Now, I do tend to don
 ate to those projects that are worthwhile and some of them are on Linux and 
only 1 is on windows. sure, its a couple of dollars a month, but its worth it.

-eric

On Apr 23, 2017, at 5:30 PM, Linux for blind general discussion wrote:

> No. It's the attitude of "Why oh why can't Orca be more like Jaws, the gold 
> standard of utter crap" that will drive many of us away. No, screen reader 
> developers on different operating systems can't work together, and I 
> explained exactly why that can't be. If you can't handle that, and you think 
> I have a negative attitude simply because I pointed out exactly why it can't 
> work, then that's not my problem. The issue is portability and reusability of 
> the code, not the openness of the code in this case.
> 
> And if anyone in this whole world can explain to me something, anything at 
> all that NVDA implements better than Orca that could be fixed in Orca by 
> something as simple as a copy/paste, then I challenge you to copy and paste 
> it and then tell us how much better it works.
> ~Kyle
> 
> _______________________________________________
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> Blinux-list@redhat.com
> https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/blinux-list


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