*Does quick test* At least on my system, using ctrl+left square bracket to go back a page in Firefox puts focus on the link that took me forward, though I'll admit behavior isn't always consistent. As for key bindings, I'm not sure a unified default would have much benefit to the average user. Might make transitioning from Windows to Linux easier, but the specific combination of applications the user uses is likely to be a much more important factor regardless, and changing the default of one program to match another could trip up users used to the old default. Personally, I'm in favor of customizable keybindings, ideally using a plain-text config file that is human readable(making customization easy for CLI junkies), an accessible gui for editing the keybindings(to make customization easy for those who prefer GUIs), and a trivial means of restoring the defaults(to make life easier for those who screwed up trying to customize). Now, if the devs of NVDA and Orca, and perhaps other graphical screen readers could agree upon a unified keymap and fully implemented custom keybindings, it might be a good idea for them to include presets such as NVDA Classic, Orca Classic, JAWS, ZoomText, and Unified along side the option to customize(Note: the inclusion of JAWS and ZoomText in that list assumes IP law isn't crazy enough for proprietary screen readers to claim ownership of their keybindings). And if other blind users want to improve their ability to use an interface that is designed with a mouse or touchscreen in mind, their welcome to it, but until some technology that allows for truely tactile interfaces becomes mainstream, I'm more interested in accessibility advances that will free me from the GUI entirely. -- Sincerely, Jeffery Wright President Emeritus, Nu Nu Chapter, Phi Theta Kappa. Former Secretary, Student Government Association, College of the Albemarle. _______________________________________________ Blinux-list mailing list Blinux-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/blinux-list