Michael Whapples, le Thu 10 Jun 2010 15:42:58 +0100, a écrit : > On 06/10/2010 03:35 PM, Samuel Thibault wrote: > >I'll just take this example. > > > >Michael Whapples, le Thu 10 Jun 2010 15:24:51 +0100, a écrit : > > > >>Like wise, an icon to start Braille seems a little pointless > >>as how would a blind user visually find the icon (OK, may be a partially > >>sighted Braille user, but if they knew of the shortcut would they just > >>press > >>the keys). > >> > >But what about a sighted user (who knows not much about accessibility) > >who introduces another non-sighted user to Linux ? It'd still be good > >to have a simple clear icon to enable braille: "oh, there's braille > >support, let's try". > Oh, how do I enable it by myself in the future?
By waiting for the pop bubble that gives the shortcut. > but you possibly want to protect against where user interaction is > altered). Right. That's why gnome warns when you enable sticky keys etc. just to make sure you didn't enable them by accident. Samuel _______________________________________________ gnome-accessibility-list mailing list gnome-accessibility-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-accessibility-list