On 06/28/2013 04:52 PM, yoann....@voila.fr wrote: > Hi everybody, > > This conversation is not recent but I think it is very important to provide a > complete accessibility solution in Gnome. The previous version which have > good solutions are old. For my new laptop I need at least a 3.6 kernel to > recognize and use lots of devices. On this machine I installed Ubuntu 12.04 > LTS and I manually upgrade the kernel and I install gnome-session-fallback, > but this is very instable. I tried the same thing with Ubuntu 13.04 without > updating the kernel (already 3.8) but this is also instable with fallback > session. > > Per consequent only unity and Gnome shell are usable but not accessible for > me. > > I don't say this to criticize but I would like to participate more actively > on this project. I haven't any idea of the difficulty and complexity of > implementing such project however when I have few time I would like to help > you. > > What do you think about this ? > > Yoann. > > > Yes I tried to set color options in the zoom dialog. This reverse colors of > the entire display and allows me to access for example nautilus and numerous > Web pages with white or light background. The problem is that with this > option all the destop interface (top panel, left dock, launcher menu opened > with super key...) that are originally dark become bright with negative > option. It is impossible to use an operating system by changing permanently > negative option each time I want to access menu. > > I know many people who have the same difficulties. On gnome 2.x there is for > instance the clearlooks theme that propose a very simple and uniform color > theme in term of background. So an additional full theme available without > installation can be resolve this difficulties without any impact on all other > users. > this is simply an idea, not necessarily the bast solution... In all cases, > accessibility not limits itself to a set of assistive technologies. The > system and interfaces must provide a minimum usability and respect some > constraints. And I think this is not incompatible with a system for not > disabled people.
The main problem with themes are that they are hard to maintain. In the past we had more than one accessibility related theme, and in the end we had problems because they were outdated. That is the reason that right now there is only one accessibility theme (HighContrast) as the one removed could be achieved by using that theme and the zoom options. In any case, I agree that the issue you mention is a problem. Right now I see some options: a) Adding an option on the magnifier in order to only apply the effect on a specific window Problem: would need a lot of micromanaging to the user b) Adding an option so the magnifier only affects the region below the panel Problems: * It doesn't solve the problem if the user needs to modify the appearence of the panel too (magnify it, change the colors, etc) c) Modify HighContrast theme, in order to be more uniform with the background color Am I missing some option? Thanks for your feedback BR -- Alejandro Piñeiro Iglesias _______________________________________________ gnome-accessibility-devel mailing list gnome-accessibility-devel@gnome.org https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-accessibility-devel