Another possibility could be to have the installer check for a monitor and if no monitor is connected, turn on a screen reader.
On Mon, 2 Mar 2020, john doe wrote: > Date: Mon, 2 Mar 2020 11:24:48 > From: john doe <johndoe65...@mail.com> > To: Rich Morin <r...@cfcl.com>, debian-boot@lists.debian.org, > debian-accessibil...@lists.debian.org > Subject: Re: boot-time accessibility issues > Resent-Date: Mon, 2 Mar 2020 16:26:05 +0000 (UTC) > Resent-From: debian-accessibil...@lists.debian.org > > On 3/2/2020 5:13 PM, Samuel Thibault wrote: > > john doe, le lun. 02 mars 2020 17:02:49 +0100, a ecrit: > >> Prompting the user with a question asking if accessibility is desired > >> would go a lon way. > > > > But we don't necessarily want to ask the question on all Debian systems > > at all boot. > > > > I'm not saying that there is no solution. I'm saying that it's not just > > a matter of adding a question, but rather to determine a reasonable way > > to have it asked. > > > > One way could be to emit that prompt when the "low" priority is used. > > That way, the question would not be asked for regular user but could be > triggered by choosing the low priority or preseeded in a preseed file. > > -- > John Doe > > --