On 2/27/19, Cindy-Sue Causey <butterflyby...@gmail.com> wrote: > On 2/26/19, Samuel Henrique <samuel...@debian.org> wrote: >> Hello, >> >> I'm just passing along feedback that I received from a Brazilian user who >> could not install Debian using speech synthesis, he was using the latest >> stable ISO (but this should be happening for sometime now). >> >> The problem was that right at the start there is a screen to choose the >> language of the installation process and the system installed, with a >> list >> of 29 languages, and then the following: >> "Next choices are available with '+' ". >> >> He didn't understand the last part and thought there was no Portuguese >> support, as the languages are sorted alphabetically and the 29th one is >> Lithuanian. >> >> Now, my main goal here is to report this so we can have a datapoint. I'm >> not sure about the fixes though as I'm not experienced in accessibility, >> but I would be happy if there was a way to solve this. >> >> The first quickest and dirtiest solution that I see is to just list all >> of >> the languages at once, without paginating it, and thus requiring the user >> to only understand the English translation o the numbers. > > > Would... having something say "M - Z" or "M to Z" (or even both, > perhaps with one in parentheses) along with the '+' help any? > > Just thinking out loud... after pondering for a few seconds. This is a > toughy. You'd have to find something universally translatable for > those very seconds in Time... before Users get in the door to the > language they speak and understand.
Additionally.. For it to make sense, it would help if the first page somehow referenced "A - L" or maybe "A - Li" at the top of the list. That would help hint that the rest of the alphabet can be expected to appear further on down... Cindy :) -- Cindy-Sue Causey Talking Rock, Pickens County, Georgia, USA * runs with birdseed *