Activity log for bug #1067166

Date Who What changed Old value New value Message
2012-10-16 03:02:02 Jeremy Bícha bug added bug
2012-10-16 03:02:12 Jeremy Bícha tags needs-design
2012-10-16 03:02:28 Jeremy Bícha attachment added quantal-a11y-menu.png https://bugs.launchpad.net/ayatana-design/+bug/1067166/+attachment/3399707/+files/quantal-a11y-menu.png
2012-10-16 03:02:45 Jeremy Bícha attachment added quantal-a11y-menu-popup.png https://bugs.launchpad.net/ayatana-design/+bug/1067166/+attachment/3399708/+files/quantal-a11y-menu-popup.png
2012-10-16 03:04:42 Jeremy Bícha attachment added gnome-shell-a11y-menu.png https://bugs.launchpad.net/ayatana-design/+bug/1067166/+attachment/3399709/+files/gnome-shell-a11y-menu.png
2012-10-16 03:05:49 Jeremy Bícha description As a legacy from GNOME 2, Unity includes a hidden accessibility menu that is pretty much useless. To activate, open System Settings and click Universal Access. Switch to the Typing tab and enable accessibility features from the keyboard. The a11y menu uses the blue accessibility icon. It should instead use the mono accessibility icon from unity-greeter (and a ubuntu-mono-light version will need to be created). The a11y menu has only one button. Clicking the button opens a pop-up window with almost all of the choices broken since 11.10....and pretty much nobody noticed. (Screenshots attached) We should look to GNOME's a11y menu for inspiration. We should seriously consider enabling the menu by default as it makes it significantly easier for someone to turn on the screen keyboard or mouse keys if for some reason their keyboard isn't connected or is malfunctioning. As a counterpoint, the "Remove Accessibility" extension is GNOME Shell's most popular extension but that is at least partly to blame that the developers didn't include a built-in way to disable it. And by the way, unity-greeter has an a11y menu with three options: Onscreen keyboard High Contrast Ctrl+H Screen Reader Ctrl+S As a legacy from GNOME 2, Unity includes a hidden accessibility menu that is pretty much useless. To activate, open System Settings and click Universal Access. Switch to the Typing tab and enable accessibility features from the keyboard. The a11y menu uses the blue accessibility icon. It should instead use the mono accessibility icon from unity-greeter (and a ubuntu-mono-light version will need to be created). The a11y menu has only one button. Clicking the button opens a pop-up window with almost all of the choices broken since 11.10....and pretty much nobody noticed. (Screenshots attached) We need a redesigned a11y status menu ("indicator"). We should look to GNOME's a11y menu for inspiration. We should seriously consider enabling the menu by default as it makes it significantly easier for someone to turn on the screen keyboard or mouse keys if for some reason their keyboard isn't connected or is malfunctioning. As a counterpoint, the "Remove Accessibility" extension is GNOME Shell's most popular extension but that is at least partly to blame that the developers didn't include a built-in way to disable it. And by the way, unity-greeter has an a11y menu with three options: Onscreen keyboard High Contrast Ctrl+H Screen Reader Ctrl+S
2012-10-16 03:07:45 Jeremy Bícha summary Please design an accessibility menu Please design an accessibility status menu
2012-10-16 14:34:34 Adolfo Jayme Barrientos bug added subscriber Adolfo Jayme Barrientos
2012-10-17 09:26:27 Alan Bell bug added subscriber Alan Bell
2012-10-17 09:26:35 Alan Bell tags needs-design a11y needs-design
2013-01-31 00:31:55 Adolfo Jayme Barrientos bug task added gnome-settings-daemon (Ubuntu)
2013-01-31 00:32:13 Adolfo Jayme Barrientos gnome-settings-daemon (Ubuntu): status New Triaged
2013-01-31 00:32:18 Adolfo Jayme Barrientos gnome-settings-daemon (Ubuntu): importance Undecided High