hello All:

Let me give you a clue from the Employers stand point.

1. we hire Linux Support Techs. who happen to be blind.
2. Coming from a fellow blind person I got to tell you that most blind people 
say they want to work but really don't know what work is.
3. there is more to Linux and working on it from a business stand point than 
from a sitting home all day being geekie stand point.

I have watched this topic for a while and kind of wonder why this is hard to 
figure out. Linux Accessability is not viable simply because people are Wishy 
Washie, it has nothing to do with money. because we are desperately trying to 
give money away all the time, but the thing is people don't want to "Work" for 
it, they just want hand outs. and for the people who do work on it, breathe it 
and eat it. they are too geekie to communicate with out sounding rude, mean or 
condescending.

Gabe Vega
CEO
Commtech LLC
Web: http://commtechusa.net
FaceBook: http://facebook.com/commtechllc
Twitter: http://twitter.com/commtechllc
Email: i...@commtechusa.net
Phone: (888) 351-5289 ext. 710
Fax: (480) 535-7649

On Nov 2, 2013, at 1:29 PM, B. Henry <burt1ib...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Fair and far enough! 
> I doubt I'll live to see any other star, nor earth critters traveling to one; 
> but a viable sub-culture seems completely reasonable. 
> If we continue down this path of the "1%" vs. the "99%" then I think some 
> groups must inevitably split off from, or better coaless out of the 99%. 
> Education is the key no matter what though, so thanks for the suggestions in 
> other messages. 
> We're going pretty OT, but if one or 10 new contributers come out of this 
> then this will be perhaps the most important thread I've ever seen on thhis 
> mailing list.
> Cheers.
> --
> B.H.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> On Fri, Nov 01, 2013 at 10:28:06PM -0400, Doug Smith wrote:
>> Nuke degrees.  I am not the best at math, but I have real savant skills when 
>> it comes to anything with a digital component.  I am working with 
>> tutorials to try and catch up on the stuff that I didn't have access to in 
>> school.  I like coding, in fact, it's what I actually got this machine for, 
>> and I hope to put it to good use one day soon.  
>> 
>> As for math, it was my worst skill in school, but having all the math tools 
>> I have on here seems to solve that problem.  Once more, a few learning 
>> ally textbooks and some net-based tutorials can take care of the problem.  
>> 
>> You're right, I think that, if we can take most or all the money out of 
>> these tech situations, the best possibility for blind people to be employed 
>> would be to form our own society, build some kind of generation ship and 
>> attempt to colonize another star.  This would keep the pervasive low 
>> expectations out of the equation as well and we would have only ourselves to 
>> blame if something went wrong.  
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> Thanks. 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> -- 
>> Doug Smith: Special Agent
>> S.W.A.T  Spiritual Warfare and Advanced Technology
>> Forever serving our LORD and SAVIOUR, JESUS CHRIST.
>> 
>> 
>> -- 
>> Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list
>> Ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com
>> https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-accessibility
> -- 
> Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list
> Ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com
> https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-accessibility

-- 
Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list
Ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-accessibility

Reply via email to