>________________________________
> De: Flavia Weisghizzi <fla...@weisghizzi.it>
>Para: marketing-list@gnome.org
>Enviado: Domingo 3 de febrero de 2013 11:12
>Asunto: Re: distro that is focused on accessibilty
> 
>
>Il 02/02/2013 07:13, Sriram Ramkrishna ha scritto:
>
>Hi All,
>>
>>I was reading on /r/Linux on reddit about a distro that is
          looking for donations to work on a completely accessible
          operating system.  I posted a note talking about our own
          efforts at accessibility.
>>
>>More importantly, we are doing our own fund drive and perhaps
          it might be worth doing something jointly.
>>
>>
I have asked them to contact me.  I'm hoping that this might be a good 
partnership.
>>
>>sri
>>
>>
>>
>Hi Sri,
>
>I think this is a great idea!
>
>I've managed the a11y question in GNOME 2 and the support was very
    good, not so good in GNOME 3, but I was talking just a couple of
    days ago with Juanjo Marin and he confirmed me that a11y team for
    3.8 is reaching some interesting goals.
>
>:)
>
>Cheers,
>


Hi !

The transition to GNOME 3.0 was a regression because we weren't able to deliver 
an accessible desktop in time. The main reason was that Bonobo was dropped and 
we have to migrate all our accessibility stack to D-Bus and we didn't have the 
time to make gnome shell accessible. The design of gnome shell included an 
accessibility icon, so at least it was clear our intentions, though 
unfortunately the result in 3.0 were very poor.  In the transition to 3.0 to 
3.4 a lot of work was done in the accessibility technology stack. We think that 
we've got the same level of accessibility in GNOME 3.4 that GNOME 2 in general 
terms, Orca performs better than in the gnome 2 but we have some small details 
like sticky keys indicator that still are not present in GNOME 3 (#647711, 
still not resolved).

Starting with GNOME 3.6, the accessibility stack has been highly integrated 
into the core, so users that need any assistive technology can use GNOME right 
from the start. So far, users that needed any assistive technology had to 
activate accessibility support. This was cumbersome, because they had to figure 
out how to do that without the help of any assistive technology that they may 
need. This feature is an important milestone in GNOME's accessibilty.

I think is important to note that GNOME accessibility technologies is the facto 
cross desktop standard for accessibility. The accessibilty team help Qt and KDE 
developers to improve their accessibility support. Thanks to this 
collaboration, Orca users will be able to access not only GNOME/GTK+ 
applications, but also KDE/Qt applications.

IMHO, distros oriented to accessibility still has sense, but I think/hope we 
are getting close to make this something in the past. At this moment, the big 
gap to fill for making an major distro accessible is making their installer 
accessible.


Cheers,

   -- Juanjo Marin

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