Hi all.
I've been using linux at work and at home for at least 12 years.
I certainly encounter accessibility problems as I also encountered when
I was a windows user.
In my opinion, accessibility in linux has improved a lot, even because
there seems to be a greater interest in the community in using linux.
By the way, this message was written and sent from a computer with
fedora workstation version 36 installed.
On 8/15/22 10:25, Linux for blind general discussion wrote:
For me, I still love Linux enough to keep up with the accessibility stuff,
and even try it every six months or so. However, the last time I tried it,
Orca was so unstable that I managed to crash it by pressing Alt + Tab. Now,
this was on an HP Pavilian laptop, but I don't see how any lack of hardware
drivers would *only* effect accessibility. I tried Fedora, Ubuntu, and I
think Mint. All performed the same. Well, Ubuntu lasted a bit longer but
still, wow. Now, before I get another batch of complain-mail, I'm not
saying Linux isn't usable for those who don't have demanding jobs with
oodles of rolls to fill and hats to wear and people to work with. It's nice
for home users and simple tasks, and even some development, in Emacs or
Nano or VIM or whatever. But it's not ready for *me* yet, and the people
who still develop NVDA addons, apps like Tweesecake and Bookworm, and
remote desktop solutions, all show, to me at least, that Linux isn't ready
for them yet either. I could be wrong. I admit it. But those are my
opinions, backed up by *my* experiences.
Devin Prater
r.d.t.prater@xxxxxxxxx
On Mon, Aug 15, 2022 at 8:12 AM Linux for blind general discussion <
blinux-list@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
(from Matt Campbell)
Thanks all for the appreciation and memories. But I'm afraid that, at
the risk of getting philosophical, the person who created ZipSpeak and
trplayer no longer exists. I remember being him, and I still have his
name and email address, but I'm no longer him. I've changed so much over
the two decades since then. Nothing makes that clearer than Chris's and
Karen's concerns about my attitude toward Linux console users and, more
generally, people who don't follow the whims of mainstream technology
for whatever reason. And those responses have given me something to
think about, but I don't yet know what I'll do about it. I said what I
wanted to say on the Fedora accessibility article, and maybe I shouldn't
have even let myself get pulled into that thread. But I think I'm now
philosophically far enough away from many, or even most, in this
community that I will probably retreat again from this list and other
related lists.
Matt
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