David Bolter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Hi all, > > Firefox (and other apps) provides accessibility support conditionally. > This means that on GNOME it always runs a little slower for everyone, > and eats up extra resources. I wonder if we could have GNOME > accessibility turned on, but a separate setting that Firefox can check > on GNOME to tell it if the at-spi is actually being used by a client?
This feels broken. What if I have accessibility enabled, my screen reader not started, but firefox already open? By enabling accessibility, I told the system already that I will want to use it. But with such a sneaky check, my screen reader would not be able to access firefox since it has decided to not use AT-SPI... Or did I miss something in this mail. It reads like the check you propose is kind of automatic, if it were a permanent gconf setting, it would just duplicate the Accessibility-enabled setting, wouldn't it? -- CYa, ⡍⠁⠗⠊⠕ | Debian Developer <URL:http://debian.org/> .''`. | Get my public key via finger mlang/[EMAIL PROTECTED] : :' : | 1024D/7FC1A0854909BCCDBE6C102DDFFC022A6B113E44 `. `' `- <URL:http://delysid.org/> <URL:http://www.staff.tugraz.at/mlang/> _______________________________________________ gnome-accessibility-list mailing list gnome-accessibility-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-accessibility-list