V Thu, 1 Mar 2018 10:07:08 +0100 "Kacper Gorski" <idmpaypal@gmail.com> napsáno:
-----Message d'origine----- De : Josef Reidinger [mailto:jreidinger@suse.cz] Envoyé : jeudi 1 mars 2018 08:40 À : yast-devel@opensuse.org Objet : Re: [yast-devel] Integrating Orca screen reader in to the openSUSE installer
V Thu, 1 Mar 2018 00:01:22 +0100 "Kacper Gorski" <idmpaypal@gmail.com> napsáno:
Good evening.
Could you integrate Orca into the openSUSE installer?
Because I am blind and I would like to install openSUSE independently.
cordially Kacper Gorski
Hi Kacper, I think in past it somehow worked ( I never try it ). I expect you are more experienced than we, so do you have idea what needs to be done to integrate it? I do not think that it makes it as common feature sponsored by SUSE, but it is option for hackweek project or as GSOC project ( you miss deadline for this year by few weeks ) and for it we need to have idea what needs to be done and also if you can define expected usage ( like having hardcoded shortcut that start screen reader, no mouse usage, only keyboard shortcuts and such requirements ), so we can test it properly.
Thanks Josef -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: yast-devel+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: yast-devel+owner@opensuse.org
Hello.
As far as I know, the openSUSE installer never includes a screen reader.
All I know is that for example some live CD's of openSUSE 11 and 12 proposed, at startup options to press the F9 key on the keyboard to launch the screen reader. Debian, for example, also offers assistive technology for installation, including the famous screen reader.
But as I have a preference for openSUSE, it would be nice to integrate assistive technologies into the openSUSE installer for people with disabilities.
If the goal of openSUSE is to target everyone, beginners experiment them etc, so handicaps them too?
cordially Kacper Gorski
it is openSUSE goal, but also openSUSE is not perpetum mobile. Someone have to do the work. So you do not need to convince me that it is useful feature. As I said I do not think that SUSE will sponsor such work, but it can be done as side project by community or by SUSE as part of hackweek. But for that goal I need to know what needs to be done and ideally how to test it? E.g. I expect mouse is useless for blind people right? so you use keyboard only? Or do you have/need special hardware? I do not know any blind people around who I can ask, so I expect that you involve and helps with testing and also with answering questions when we start implementing it. E.g. you can be co-mentor if we add it as Google Summer of Code project. Josef -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: yast-devel+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: yast-devel+owner@opensuse.org