----- Mensaje original -----

> De: Dave Neary <dne...@gnome.org>
> Para: marketing-l...@gnome.org

> On 11/28/2011 08:04 PM, Karen Sandler wrote:
>>  jjmarin and I are working on this text to promote the FoG campaign we hope
>>  to launch next week. How can we improve it? Also, do you like "Make 
> 2012
>>  the year of accessibility for GNOME" as a short tagline?
> 
> I hate to say it, but I'm not sure if Accessibility as an abstract concept 
> will sell.
> 
> Do we have some examples of GNOME users whose lives were made measurably 
> better 
> because of the a11y work we've done? Show-cases work wonders.
> 
>>  With your help we can start tackling those goals. Let's kickstart 2012 
> as
>>  the Year of Accessibility at GNOME and make the most usable desktop
>>  environment the most accessible desktop environment!
> 
> Do we have any specific improvements (and the reasons why they're important 
> - or the people for whom they're important) to point to?
> 


Hi,

I think is worth to crossposting the following message from the marketing list 
to
the accessibility list to get some feedback from users about how useful the 
accessibilty features of GNOME are in their lives and why it is important
for them to keep working on this.

Basically, there are a lot of accessibility tasks to be done in several areas. 
There
are features to be implemented, for example, the gnome-shell Magnifier track 
focus 
and caret, and more obscure issues in the platform, like peformance 
Improvements 
which are important for getting a snapier user experience, just to name a 
couple of
them. There are many tasks in the accessibilty roadmap [1] haven't been done yet
because a lack of resources.

Cheers,


   -- Juanjo Marin


[1] Two year 2010-2012 accessibilty 
roadmap. https://live.gnome.org/Accessibility/Roadmap

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