Julien Claassen wrote:
OK, I decided to do a quickie on-list, because I think
it might be of
interest. This is about blind people and screenreaders. If your not
interested, just stop here. No ladish relevance in here. :-)
You can use Linux perfectly without any screenreader like Orca or
Adriana (Adriane?). Linux offers so many text-based applications, that
a blind person can easily stick to the commandline only.
For the commandline you only need a braille-display driver. There
are two of them: brltty (currently maintained and Debian standard,
also needed for Orca) and SBl (SuSE Blinux). Not sure if the latter is
still maintained.
And yes, if you need to rely on Javascript and other interactive
goodies of the web, you would most certainly want a screenreader. The
same goes for having to read AND write WORD or OFFICE documents.
Reading is no problem, writing is the barrier. :-)
Still I'm not sure how much a screenreader would help with the big
audio apps. My knowledge is, that some of them bring their own
widgets, which Orca finds dificult, and they sometimes use other
purely grapical means of control. The latter is true for at least some
aspects.
Sorry, iff I didn't tell you anything new or interesting. I just
thought, it might be the right time to brag a little. :-)
Warm regards
Julien
It's important :)
we're talking about audio and everybody able to see today, can become
blind tomorrow ;). Anyway applications should have comfortable features
for people who are able to see (I'm able to see and I like some
comfortable graphical issues ;)), but it shouldn't be forgotten that
seeing shouldn't be needed to make music ;) ... we're listening with our
ears and not our eyes.
Thanks for your advice :).
Ralf