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Someone please tell me screen reader support isn’t broken on the major Linux distributions like Fedora and Ubuntu that ship Wayland as default.

(I can’t get the modifier key for Orca to work under the latest Fedora Silverblue and, according to the linked issue, it’s because… it just doesn’t work under Wayland? That can’t be right, right? It would mean the major Linux distributions are inaccessible.)

github.com/xkbcommon/libxkbcom

GitHubSupport for Arbitrary Modifiers (Accessibility Keybindings) · Issue #425 · xkbcommon/libxkbcommonBy TTWNO

Wow, OK, so I wasn’t missing anything. It looks like the only available screen reader on major Linux distributions is broken and has been for some time.

github.com/xkbcommon/libxkbcom

Lack of accessibility not being a show stopper for an operating systems blows my mind.

We’re talking about distributions like Ubuntu and Red Hat Enterprise Linux with enterprise customers (aren’t there some accessibility laws that apply here? 🤔)

GitHubSupport for Arbitrary Modifiers (Accessibility Keybindings) · Issue #425 · xkbcommon/libxkbcommonBy TTWNO

Just installed and had a quick play with a new screen reader for Linux called Odilia. It doesn’t support key bindings at all at the moment but it did read stuff out and performed better than Orca at that with the custom Festival voice I’m using (Orca performs very well with its internal robot voice but the Festival voices are far more human.)

Anyway, not ready for use in any way but might be worth keeping an eye on:

odilia.app/

odilia.appHome | Odilia Screen ReaderWelcome to Odilia! Odilia is a new screen reader for the Linux desktop. It’s written in Rust, for maximum performance and stability. On top of what screen reading features we already have on Linux, we intend to add roughly the following: Addons You’re no longer limited to built-in functionality! Install addons from third-party developers to extend Odilia with new commands and abilities. Or, if you’re a developer, write your own in one of several languages.

@aral One of the missions financed by the Sovereign Tech Fund is precisely "Design and prototype a new accessibility stack". It's discussed almost every week in This Week in GNOME, for example thisweek.gnome.org/posts/2024/.

thisweek.gnome.org#135 Experimental Maps · This Week in GNOME
Aral Balkan

@lebout2canap And that’s awesome. My question remains how it was decided to make something (Wayland) the default when it is inaccessible. (I guess it’s a rhetorical question because the answer can only be “because lack of accessibility is not a show stoppper.”)

@aral I was just responding to say that Odilia was not the only hope, I was not responding to defend the decisions and/or the current state of things.