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Revision as of 07:29, 14 February 2007
Accessibility and Assistive Technology
Even in "first world" countries like the USA, Assistive Technology and Accessibility adaptations are expensive. People with physical or mental disabilities are often, due to their disability, in the lowest income classes, and have difficulty affording the technologies required.
In the Open Source Software community, a fair amount of software already exists to aid the disabled. However, they are often not installed or configured by default, and can be extremely difficult to add by a normal user.
Under this area, we should seek to list specifically:
- what Assistive Technology software packages should be included in the default olpc distribution
- how they should be configured by default
- what technologies need to have improved documentation to be useful
Accessibility ideas for the OLPC laptop
The following pages in this wiki may be of interest.
Accessibility Computing Numerical Pointer
Helping Blind and Visually Impaired People
Although probably not a main target of the OLPC effort, the blind and visually impaired community seems to be a tight and cohesive community with clear requirements and needs, that could piggy-back on the effort as a whole, and hopefully make technology more multi-media in the true sense. Some resources or ideas:
- JAWS - from Freedom Scientific. Non-free.
- ORCA - from Gnome, FAQ and wiki. LGPL license
- There's a Grupo de usuarios ciegos y deficientes visuales de GNU/Linux (blind and visually impaired GNU/Linux users group) and its wiki.