Hi all. I’m a person who is blind, and have used Fedora off and on for years, but may have found my forever home in Fedora, after finding Arch to be too advanced for me, but Debian to have too old of packages, especially in regards to accessibility. Now, I looked at the accessibility parts of Fedora documentation, like the page at:
https://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/Fedora/12/html/Accessibility_Guide/inde... https://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/Fedora/12/html/Accessibility_Guide/index.html
There are parts that talk about using Emacs with Emacspeak to do things like browsing the web or doing email. These days, Firefox and Thunderbird with Orca are good enough to do that. So, is there any way I can help? Devin Prater d.prater@me.com Https://devinprater.flounder.online
On Fri, Jul 16, 2021 at 6:38 PM Devin Prater via users users@lists.fedoraproject.org wrote:
Hi all. I’m a person who is blind, and have used Fedora off and on for years, but may have found my forever home in Fedora, after finding Arch to be too advanced for me, but Debian to have too old of packages, especially in regards to accessibility. Now, I looked at the accessibility parts of Fedora documentation, like the page at:
https://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/Fedora/12/html/Accessibility_Guide/inde...
There are parts that talk about using Emacs with Emacspeak to do things like browsing the web or doing email. These days, Firefox and Thunderbird with Orca are good enough to do that. So, is there any way I can help?
Hi Devin, you might check with the docs team via the docs mailing list?
https://lists.fedoraproject.org/archives/list/docs@lists.fedoraproject.org/
And the docs project list of sub projects
https://pagure.io/group/fedora-docs
Which includes the accessibility guide sub project
https://pagure.io/accessibility-guide