Tzafrir Cohen, le Sat 07 Mar 2009 11:29:56 +0000, a écrit : > > `What if, for example, you walk up to a friend/coworker and talk about > > some issue. You end up wanting to show them something, so you'd > > actually like to login on tehir Linux machine with accessibility enabled > > so that you can work together on the project. However, since nobody > > thought their machine would ever be used by a disabled person, the > > necessary software would not be installed.' > > What does it take to "enable" them?
Let's rather say "start them". > Furthermore, if you're a blind person using KDE, what good would it do > for you that dasher is installed on the system? > > That is: accessibility sounds to me a bit like l10n: normally no point > in installing all of it. Most potential users would need just part of > it. That's true indeed. You you never know in advance what kind of accessibility features your users will need. And thus you install it all, just like l10n. Samuel -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-boot-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org