Aldo, le Sat 21 Feb 2009 16:43:13 +0100, a écrit : > > That is why I think ultimately, accessibility infrastructure needs to be > >part > > of the default desktop installation. > > Impossible: we have a need like you already have some at the beginning of > your Deb installation; explain me please what's the difference or what's the > problem between having brltty support right in the d-i but not further > accessibility/assistivity for Gnome ?
Don't mix things: Mario was answering your initial concern, which was about _installing_ gnome-orca. He answered by saying that we should probably rather convince the debian developers that gnome-orca should just _always_ be installed. And thus no need for a tasksel item. That's all he meant to say, no need to go ranting. Now you are talking about _activation_. That is a quite different concern (and much more difficult to implement), but yes that would be good too. Now, about the difference: as I explained in French on another list it is merely that it has to be done, and nobody yet took the time to do it, that's all. > on the other hand, OK, suppose it must and will be part of the > desktop; But he meant not enabled by default. > how far shall this irritate sighted persons or have an effect > to the hole system and its fluidity ? Thus no other issue than disk space (just like internationalization). > What you are explaining is interesting, but you don't answer to the problem > of being able to have that assistive tech tool "on" at the first boot/login > into your 1st session: the only way to give an answer to this problem is by > adding that choice in tasksel, IMHO the right place, as it is the right > place for the (Gnome) Desktop. Nope. Tasksel deals with installing packages, not configuring them. > I think so the two approaches might be interesting but you have to begin > from the beginning, and that means for me: if you already did an effort to > prvide and fit brltty support from the boot: prompt, its coherent and > logical then to finish the job by providing the [*]Orca Asssistive Tech > button in / during the installer. Sure, but as said above, it takes time, and nobody has taken it yet, that's all. Really, it's not easy like snapping fingers... Samuel -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-accessibility-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org