My goal here is to help improve accessibility for as many people as possible at minimal average cost per user. Doing that through FOSS accessibility on FOSS platforms while using FOSS applications would be great, but an increase in user/developer communications that leads to an improvement on proprietary accessibility on proprietary platforms while using proprietary applications is still a net gain according to this part of my utility function. Perhaps freedesktop.org isn't the place to include information on mailing lists for proprietary projects(even ones that run on FOSS platforms) or FOSS projects that don't run on a FOSS platform, but that doesn't mean there isn't value in making those lists more widely known. You'll probably never convince me that those who pay for JAWS aren't being ripped off, or that persuading them to switch to a more affordable alternative isn't the right thing to do, but even JAWS Loyalists deserve better accessibility, and if I knew of a way JAWS users could offer feedback to JAWS developers that might actually matter, it would be pretty crappy of me to deliberately withhold that information from JAWS users. That said, I agree that it might be counterproductive to contribute to the conversation on a list for a project one is not using and has little interest in using. -- 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