Users and Developers Partying Together - Part II

This past Friday, I had the great pleasure of attending the first of what will hopefully be a regularly-occurring event: The Orca users group in Boston. Thanks so much to Joe Lazzaro of ITD for hosting it! And thanks to Will Walker of Sun Microsystems for presenting not just Orca, but also the “big picture” of Linux/UNIX. I think we all came away with a FAR better understanding than we arrived with.

The turnout was great: 22 individuals, 17 of whom are blind or visually impaired; the constructive feedback even better! At the end of the day, we had compiled a list of “request for enhancements” which, as promised, I entered in Bugzilla that evening.

The subsequent response from the Orca team to the RFEs amazed me. I suppose by now it shouldn’t have. In the past couple of months, I’ve come to realize that the Orca team members truly care about creating compelling access to Linux/UNIX for users who are blind, and that they put in the long hours and effort required to ensure they accomplish no less. Still…. It was, after all, Friday night. So I don’t think it’s unreasonable for me to have been at least a little bit surprised to discover Rich examining each RFE I entered more or less in real time, in many cases responding that it would be easy to implement and describing how he would go about doing so. For a guy who claims to like science fiction, Rich has clearly learned nothing from Scotty on Star Trek. :-) By Saturday morning, Rich was beginning to implement the solutions to the straightforward RFEs and soliciting feedback from users and the team on the rest. Will joined in the discussion, and work on the Boston RFEs continued throughout Saturday. Sunday was no different. Like I said, these guys take their work—and user feedback—VERY seriously.

If you’re wondering how I know that the Orca team doesn’t take weekends off, :) it’s thanks in large part to Bugzilla. Any time someone comments on an item you have entered, you are notified via email. I also periodically browse the RFEs and bugs that others have entered, adding myself to the CC list of the ones I care about so that I can follow their progress as well. Bugzilla even has RSS support. Unlike commercial software development, what goes on in the open source community is incredibly transparent: If you want to know how things are progressing, all you have to do is look. If you want to influence that progress, participate. Bugzilla is a great resource: Again, it’s users and developers partying together!

And then there is Rich’s blog. Rich blogs about all sorts of interesting things—one of which is Orca. That’s how I found out that this weekend he also added support for a pronunciation dictionary. Very cool! (And yes, Rich, I should admittedly read the changelogs more often than I do. Please keep blogging about Orca! :) )

Finally, there is the Orca web site (http://live.gnome.org/Orca) and the mailing list (see http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/orca-list for more information). If you’re interested in Orca—and I do hope that you are!—I encourage you to check out both so that you can learn more about, and contribute to the development of, what is becoming a really great screen reader.

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