Re: RE: The Live CD et al.

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]



I think Donald sums up most of what I would say, certainly in the part 
relating to accessibility, it is fully possible and may be a bit of a 
surprise when you see it all working (one surprise is how fast regular 
users of text to speech software can actually listen to the speech). 
Donald points out that he saw the blind users using ubuntu, this is 
probably because ubuntu have done some work to make the LiveCD 
accessible, however I feel fedora may have more mileage for the more 
power user and so why I would like to see greater accessibility on fedora.

Following on the idea that may be the LiveCD is a showcase, yes this is 
a good idea as its the first experience someone might get of the 
distribution. In my case as a blind user, I must have the gnome 
accessibility tools there before I can use it, fedora has that, shame 
there not quite set up optimally (that's what I want to try and help 
change).

Michael Whapples
On 01/-10/-28163 08:59 PM, Donald Buchan wrote:
>> Hi,
>> This story with the completely blind user has another question - how will
>> such a user work with the computer screen and on the computer at all.
>> Anyway.
>>
>>      
> I have complete confidence in a blind computer user being able to use the
> liveCD, although I have not checked out the accessibility software on it.
> I saw a demo a few months ago by a couple of blind computer users at a lug
> meeting about accessibility under linux (ubuntu but no matter.)  To say I
> was impressed would be an understatement; besides being entertained by
> their demonstrations of how the accents, cadence, gender, and so on of the
> vocal interface were being manipulated (yes, they were trying to entertain
> us!) the way the two of them managed to navigate through web pages and
> sysadmin put to rest any doubts in my mind how a blind person could use a
> linux box as well as a sighted person.
>
>    
>> RE: Live CD
>> The Live CD is more than O.K. In my view a specification or a quick
>> reference guide in style expert system should be done what the newcomer
>> may or should do after installing the Live CD.
>>      
> This is ultimately what needs to be done if a "full fat" image isn't used;
> certainly my experience a couple of weeks ago with the two livecd images
> underlined the need for "something" since while an expert user might know
> what to do, the liveCD should be a showcase of what the distro can do for
> a new user, and if having a killer app -- such as in my case, OO.o -- is
> not practical, then "an easy" way, slash that, an obvious guide on how to
> install it for the newbie would be crucial.
>
>
>
>    

-- 
desktop mailing list
desktop@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/desktop

[Index of Archives]     [Fedora Users]     [Fedora KDE]     [Fedora Announce]     [Fedora Docs]     [Fedora Config]     [PAM]     [Red Hat Development]     [Red Hat 9]     [Gimp]     [Yosemite News]

  Powered by Linux