Subj : Re: Apps for the blind
To : Robert Wolfe
From : Richard Falken
Date : Sun Nov 28 2021 06:12 am
Re: Re: Apps for the blind
By: Robert Wolfe to Brian Rogers on Fri Nov 26 2021 01:15 pm
> On 25 Nov 2021, Brian Rogers said the following...
>
> BR> Hello Richard;
>
> BR> -=> Richard Falken wrote to Brian Rogers <=-
>
> BR> RF> I don't know if it counts as "good" since I don't use it, but Linux h Orc
> BR> RF> "Orca is a free, open source, flexible, and extensible screen reader that
> BR> RF> provides access to the graphical desktop via speech and refreshable brail
> BR> RF> [...] Orca works with applications and toolkits that support the Assistiv
> BR> RF> Technology Service Provider Interface (AT-SPI), which is the primary
> BR> RF> assistive technology infrastructure fo Linux and Solaris."
>
> BR> RF> The Knoppix distribution has integrated support for blind users, sinc
> BR> RF> Knopper¿ wife is sight imparied herself. Maybe you can give it a try.
>
> BR> Thanks for the input, I'll pass the information along. I have a small handful
> BR> friends who are blind and they lean on me to help them. I haven't figured out
> BR> since I really don't know a thing about their applications but I seem to do go
> BR> by them.
>
> The federal agency I work for uses JAWS for Windows. We are supporters of open sou
> works, so I was wonering what kind of
> support Orca has both for Windows as well as for commercial, enterprise level suppo
> you pay for?
>
As far as I know, Orca is a Gnome project, so I doubt it will be easily portable to
non POSIX Operating Systems.
I have never given it a try. I might fire up some testing install just to check how
good it is, if any.
The Knoppix solution sounds also very promising, but it is not supposed to be a
general purpose thing.
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