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The Mozilla week at CSUNHi everyone!
Here's my recap of the week Joanie, Eitan, Steve, Chris, Mick, Jamie, Frank and I spent at CSUN 2008 conference. We had a fantastic show. Frank felt the buzz on Thursday, and this continued straight on until the end of the show today. Open Source accessibility is really taking off and gaining momentum, people are very aware of what we are doing, aware of Open Source solutions like NVDA and Orca, and it has been acknowledged in very positive comments from the audience that dropped by our booth. The impression that I got was that especially among the users of proprietary screen readers, there are many more Firefox users than the screen reader vendors would want us to believe. And the greatest message from those folks was: Those who tried Firefox stuck with it and did not go back to IE. There was also a big interest in more "visible" features like the full page zoom, and it was acknowledged that, even without a magnifier, Firefox is a very compelling solution for certain types of low-vision users. Also very strong: Teachers at various institutes, schools, colleges etc. that educate blind people, are encouraging them to try Firefox. many sighted users already use it, and they are vreacted vewry happily when they found out that Firefox works with screen readers. Linux accessibility was also very well received, we even had a couple of people who said "Hey, a blind friend of mine needs to get a new computer. I saw the Orca presentation, and I'm going to put Ubuntu on the friend's computer instead of Windows." I gave two interviews with podcasters in the U.S., and one camera interview with a student who is using this project to do his senior in press filming work. When he's done and got his degree, he'll send us links so we can watch the filmed material ourselves. On the swaggy side: Most of the swag has been taken. The baby-fox buttons were "sold out" on Thursday, we had to print another stack of brochures on Saturday, and even those were all gone by the end of the day, the buttons and stickers, and also quite a number of temporary tatoos were high in demand. Frank later added: To add to Marco's comments, the day I was there we also had a number of visitors from other vendors (including Apple, Adobe, Microsoft, and Google) who came to the booth to talk about various topics ranging from Firefox support on Mac (Apple) to getting applications to work with NVDA (Adobe, Google) to creating ARIA documentation (Microsoft). It was quite a change from two years ago when you took me around to other booths to try to get people to pay some attention to Mozilla and Firefox. We are definitely being looked to as a leader, with other people working to catch up to where we are. As I told the folks at our Thursday Mozilla dinner, "it's good to be the lead dog" _______________________________________________ dev-accessibility mailing list dev-accessibility@... https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/dev-accessibility |
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Re: The Mozilla week at CSUNCongratulations to all who make the Mozilla accessibility ecosystem
rock. It is priceless. cheers, David Marco Zehe wrote: > Hi everyone! > > Here's my recap of the week Joanie, Eitan, Steve, Chris, Mick, Jamie, > Frank and I spent at CSUN 2008 conference. > > We had a fantastic show. Frank felt the buzz on Thursday, and this > continued straight on until the end of the show today. Open Source > accessibility is really taking off and gaining momentum, people are very > aware of what we are doing, aware of Open Source solutions like NVDA and > Orca, and it has been acknowledged in very positive comments from the > audience that dropped by our booth. The impression that I got was that > especially among the users of proprietary screen readers, there are many > more Firefox users than the screen reader vendors would want us to > believe. And the greatest message from those folks was: Those who tried > Firefox stuck with it and did not go back to IE. > > There was also a big interest in more "visible" features like the full > page zoom, and it was acknowledged that, even without a magnifier, > Firefox is a very compelling solution for certain types of low-vision users. > > Also very strong: Teachers at various institutes, schools, colleges etc. > that educate blind people, are encouraging them to try Firefox. many > sighted users already use it, and they are vreacted vewry happily when > they found out that Firefox works with screen readers. > > Linux accessibility was also very well received, we even had a couple of > people who said "Hey, a blind friend of mine needs to get a new > computer. I saw the Orca presentation, and I'm going to put Ubuntu on > the friend's computer instead of Windows." > > I gave two interviews with podcasters in the U.S., and one camera > interview with a student who is using this project to do his senior in > press filming work. When he's done and got his degree, he'll send us > links so we can watch the filmed material ourselves. > > > On the swaggy side: Most of the swag has been taken. The > baby-fox buttons were "sold out" on Thursday, we had to print another > stack of brochures on Saturday, and even those were all gone by the end > of the day, the buttons and stickers, and also quite a number of > temporary tatoos were high in demand. > > > Frank later added: > > To add to Marco's comments, the day I was there we also had a number of > visitors from other vendors (including Apple, Adobe, Microsoft, and > Google) who came to the booth to talk about various topics ranging from > Firefox support on Mac (Apple) to getting applications to work with NVDA > (Adobe, Google) to creating ARIA documentation (Microsoft). It was quite > a change from two years ago when you took me around to other > booths to try to get people to pay some attention to Mozilla and > Firefox. We are definitely being looked to as a leader, with other > people working to catch up to where we are. As I told the folks at our > Thursday Mozilla dinner, "it's good to be the lead dog" > > _______________________________________________ > dev-accessibility mailing list > dev-accessibility@... > https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/dev-accessibility > _______________________________________________ dev-accessibility mailing list dev-accessibility@... https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/dev-accessibility |
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Re: The Mozilla week at CSUNMy understanding is that ARIA and IAccessible2 were hot as well.
- Aaron _______________________________________________ dev-accessibility mailing list dev-accessibility@... https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/dev-accessibility |
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Re: The Mozilla week at CSUNMarco, thanks for posting this report.
I also wanted to take this opportunity to express my heartfelt thanks to all the people who helped out at the Mozilla booth at CSUN, as well as to the people at Mozilla HQ who helped with getting equipment and swag. I was able to be there in person for only one day, so I greatly appreciated everyone's help in making sure that the booth got set up before the show, staffed during the show, and got packed up after the show. Thanks again! Frank P.S. In case it was unclear, in my comment (quoted by Marco) about "two years ago when you took me around", the "you" referred to Aaron. -- Frank Hecker hecker@... _______________________________________________ dev-accessibility mailing list dev-accessibility@... https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/dev-accessibility |
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Re: The Mozilla week at CSUNI've added some personal observations on
http://eduspaces.net/stevelee/weblog/297983.html Thanks again to Mozilla for a fantastic experience. Steve Lee -- Open Source Assistive Technology Software www.fullmeasure.co.uk On 17/03/2008, Frank Hecker <hecker@...> wrote: > Marco, thanks for posting this report. > > I also wanted to take this opportunity to express my heartfelt thanks to > all the people who helped out at the Mozilla booth at CSUN, as well as > to the people at Mozilla HQ who helped with getting equipment and swag. > I was able to be there in person for only one day, so I greatly > appreciated everyone's help in making sure that the booth got set up > before the show, staffed during the show, and got packed up after the > show. Thanks again! > > Frank > > P.S. In case it was unclear, in my comment (quoted by Marco) about "two > years ago when you took me around", the "you" referred to Aaron. > > > -- > Frank Hecker > hecker@... > > _______________________________________________ > dev-accessibility mailing list > dev-accessibility@... > https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/dev-accessibility > dev-accessibility mailing list dev-accessibility@... https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/dev-accessibility |
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