GNOME Wins Award For Accessability Architecture 13
Motor writes: "The fine GTK/GNOME accessibility architecture work done by Sun Microsystems has won an award from the American Foundation for the Blind. See more details here.
Accessibility is a vital feature for any desktop system hoping for widespread use, so this is great news."
Gnome2's simplicity is nice. (Score:3, Insightful)
Now that I've been using it for a while, I think G2D is a classic case of 'less is more'. It feels light and less obtrusive, and everything does feel more consistent across the board. The rearranged Ok, Submit, Cancel (or whatever) buttons really took some getting used to, but now, I think I'm quicker at using the dialogs themselves, I know where each button will be.
I think developers should take a note from the Gnome team. The Mozilla Preferences, Gnome1.2 CC, KDE CC, and even Galeon's Pref panel are getting out of hand. If we want to be newbie friendly, make some sane choices the default, but leave the door open for advanced users to tweak.
Just the same, there's no excuse for that file dialog - it's embarrassing showing off Gnome to a newbie and having the user run into it and go "blech".
Congratulations! (Score:3, Interesting)
It certainly warms my heart to read -
BTW, there's an AFB announcement here [afb.org].
FWIW, I have a friend who has been totally blind since birth, and I had the privilege of helping him get started with UNIX. I have also watched him work with his reader (human) on a college programming assignment, and it's a thing both amazing and inspiring to watch.
XNews port? (Score:2, Interesting)
This ties in to this story because the author of XNews, Luu Tran, has cited Windows' accomodation of his severe visual impairment and Linux' lack thereof as the reason he has taken no interest in porting to Linux. Perhaps he'll check out G2 after hearing this news.
Re:XNews port? (Score:1)