On Wed, 19 Jan 2005 10:01 , 'Jack O'Quin' sent: >Janina Sajka janina@rednote.net> writes: > >> Jack O'Quin writes: >>> Julien Claassen julien@c-lab.de> writes: >>> >>> > It would work with ecasound in the same way, very perfectly! BUT: I >>> > am blind! So I can't use jamin, if jamin doesn't have the ncurses >>> > interface the Jamin people where thinking about. Does it have that? >>> >>> Sorry for misunderstanding, Julien. >>> >>> No, JAMin has a purely visual GTK-2 graphical interface. >> >> So, all may not be lost in terms of an "eyes-free" interface. >> >> Julien: Have you tried with Gnopernicus? Or with Orca? >> >> I would try this myself, but I'm about to leave for a conference. I'll >> see if I can get one of the handful of folks who've gotten comfortable >> with Gnopernicus to take a look. It would be cool if Jammin turns out to >> be accessible, without anyone knowing it. That is possible because of >> the use of GTK2. If the widgets used are standard GTK2 it either already >> is, or could easily be made so by providing object properties data. > >> Actually, by using--if you have stuck with--stock GTK2 widgets, you may >> have already achieved this. Wouldn't that be something? > >Yes, it would. > >I know we have at least a couple of custom widgets, one for meters and >one for the hand-drawn graphical EQ. > The standard graphic EQ was left in for this reason. The only thing that would then be a problem would be the parametric sliders on the hand-drawn EQ. I think you can make those meter widgets work with the standard GTK accessibility stuff (of course, I don't know how ;) I can probably figure out some keyboard shortcuts for moving and changing the parametric sliders. Jan