Yes I think it may pose possible security issues (I don't actually know and
have never heard what they are). I would only really suggest it for the Live
environment, the installed system it should only exist if the user really
needs it.
As for the bit of corba being depricated, yes that is the way its going but
currently the at-spi stuff on dbus isn't fully ready so gnome accessibility
still uses corba. I don't know when at-spi on dbus should be ready, I think
there's a bit of an issue of alot to do but not quite enough to get it done
as quick as might be desired.
Michael Whapples
----- Original Message -----
From: "Alexander Boström" <abo(a)root.snowtree.se>
To: "Discussions about development for the Fedora desktop"
<desktop(a)lists.fedoraproject.org>
Sent: Sunday, April 11, 2010 11:07 AM
Subject: Re: Improvements to make fedora more accessible to the blind
fre 2010-04-02 klockan 20:58 +0100 skrev Michael Whapples:
> 2. Once a blind user has the orca screen reader running on the LiveCD,
> if they select the icon on the desktop to install to HD orca sees the
> installer window as inaccessible. This is due to the installer running
> with extra privileges and fedora not being configured to allow orca to
> work with applications running like this. This can be simply solved by
> adding a file named /etc/orbitrc containing the following two lines:
> ORBIIOPIPv4=1
> ORBIIOPUNIX=0
That would probably be a security problem though perhaps it could be
acceptable in a single-user Live environment.
But isn't the Corba interface obsoleted by the move of AT-SPI to D-Bus
anyway?
http://www.linuxfoundation.org/collaborate/workgroups/accessibility/atk/a...
I don't know if that helps much though.
/Alexander
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