Orca only *seems* slightly slower than NVDA to some because it works
directly with the browser. I'll take that any day over a page taking
twice as long to load because it first has to be loaded into the
browser, and then it has to be loaded yet again into NVDA's virtual
buffer. And forget dynamic content. I expect dynamic content to work,
not to slow down the whole screen reader because that has to replace
part of the virtual buffer, or to fail to work at all because the
virtual buffer is immutable while a page is loaded.
And control+left arrow going to the link I clicked on last? Hell no!
Give me control+left and right that read by words as expected, which is
what Orca does. I don't want all that fancy blinky stuff they have on
Windows that doesn't half work. Give me something that at least mostly
works, and which can be improved in the near future, which is what I
feel like I have now. I once heard from Janina Sajka, a well respected
member of the w3c and the Linux Accessibility Working Group, that
Firefox + Orca is the best combination currently available. I flatly
refuse to disagree with that acessment.
~Kyle
_______________________________________________
Blinux-list mailing list
Blinux-list@xxxxxxxxxx
https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/blinux-list