Hiya, The recent discussions on Javascript, Flash, etc. have prompted me to share a personal perspective on the Linux console. I realize GUIs have long supplanted text interfaces for the sighted user, and perhaps to a lesser extent for the blind user as well. I note, for instance, the popularity of Jaws and similar on Windows. However, as someone who switched to Linux primarily because it was text-based and different from what I was used to, I very much appreciate the power of the console. Unix commands are cryptic, difficult to comprehend sometimes without manpages or the like to deconstruct them. Furthermore, unlike a Windows system, the graphical interface of Linux is not an essential component of the system--it's just an added bit of software on top of textual tools. I love the fact that with Speakup, I'm able to read kernel messages, and even debug problems, before anything more graphical than a colored 80X25 screen comes up. That all being said, some applications on the console are lacking. Word processing, web browsing--yes, even with all the security implications of Javascript which I don't know about, it does get used a lot--and things like PDF viewers and such. There are textual tools to accomplish some of that stuff, convert PDF, write formatted documents (ala TeX), etc. I love all that power. Personally, I realize the future may lie in infinitely smaller devices than a PC. But I love the Bash prompt, and hope it never goes away. Sorry for the rambling nature of this email, folks. Yours, Zack.