The Mousetweaks package provides mouse accessibility enhancements for the
GNOME desktop.
These enhancements are:
1. It offers a way to perform the various clicks without using any
hardware button.
2. It allows users to perform a right click by doing a click&hold of the
left mouse button. (For a left-handed mouse user, the terms left and right
have to be inverted.)
3. It provides an applet that the user can install on a panel. This applet
creates an area on the panel into which the pointer can be captured until
the user releases it with a predefined button and modifier combination.
This is the Gnome Accessibility Project's Assistive Technology
Service Provider Interface. It allows accessibility applications
and assistive technologies to announce their respective existence
to each other.
This is the Gnome Accessibility Project's Assistive Technology
Service Provider Interface. It allows accessibility applications
and assistive technologies to announce their respective existence
to each other.
This port contains the GTK+ module needed to interface with the SPI
framework.
This is the Gnome Accessibility Project's Assistive Technology
Service Provider Interface. It allows accessibility applications
and assistive technologies to announce their respective existence
to each other.
This version of at-spi is a major break from previous versions.
It has been completely rewritten to use D-Bus rather than
ORBIT / CORBA for its transport protocol.
This is the Gnome Accessibility Project's Assistive Technology
Service Provider Interface. It allows accessibility applications
and assistive technologies to announce their respective existence
to each other.
This port is the Python API to interface with the D-BUS based SPI framework.
This is the Gnome Accessibility Project's Assistive Technology
Service Provider Interface. It allows accessibility applications
and assistive technologies to announce their respective existence
to each other.
This port is the Python API to interface with the D-BUS based SPI framework.
The GNOME On-Screen Keyboard (GOK) is an accessibility interface
that gives you control of your system without needing a keyboard.
The GOK makes available a hierarchical button system that enables
keyboardless entry of common accelerators, and contains a
clickable keyboard that sports suggested autocompletion of many
common words, and even some commands. The GOK will provide an
alternative interface to common commands and functions within
applications that utilize the AT SPI.
The GOK is designed to be usable by many alternative input
methods, i.e. not a common keyboard and mouse combination.
Caribou is an input assistive technology intended for switch and
pointer users.
Features:
A configurable on screen keyboard with scanning mode.