[macvoiceover] Re: Virtualbox is mostly accessible
- From: Jacob Schmude <j.schmude@xxxxxxxxx>
- To: macvoiceover@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Date: Wed, 26 Nov 2008 20:08:06 -0500
No, this is a virtualization product similar to VMWare and Parallels.
The GUI is now mostly accessible, and before it was not. If you wanted
to use VirtualBox you had to do it exclusively on the command-line.
Voiceover will never be able to read other operating systems, so
that's never even a question.
The main advantages of Virtualbox are that it's free and it has some
advanced features that VMWare Fusion and Parallels lack--granted, most
people don't need these features but operating system geeks like me
find them extremely useful.
Something I'm looking into is whether Sun explicitly enabled Voiceover
accessibility in Virtualbox or if this means that QT is at long last
becoming accessible on OS X. If this is the case it opens up a world
of Applications and programming possibilities we didn't have before, a
lot of open source applications are written in QT, and even some
commercial ones.
On Nov 26, 2008, at 15:44, Sara wrote:
Hi. Are you saying this makes other operating systems accessible
with VO? Really confused here.
Sara
----- Original Message ----- From: "Jacob Schmude" <j.schmude@xxxxxxxxx
>
To: <macvoiceover@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Cc: "General discussions on all topics relating to the use of Mac OS
X by the blind" <discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Wednesday, November 26, 2008 7:03 AM
Subject: [macvoiceover] Virtualbox is mostly accessible
Hi Everyone
Well, I downloaded the latest Virtualbox, 2.0.6. Typically, I use
it via the command-line, and was in the process of running my new
Virtual machine when I noticed something very interesting. The text
in the information windows was accessible to Voiceover. Needless to
say, I dug deeper into this and am happy to report that, with the
exception of a few glitches, most of the Virtualbox GUI is
accessible with Voiceover now. Most of the glitches involve lists,
such as tables. Several of these aren't yet wrapped in
accessibility information, and so are reported as unknowns. When
you see an unknown in Virtualbox, try and interact with it. More
often than not it's a list or control group that you can actually
see the content of. Pop-up buttons also need work, but they are
useable, you need to work your way down through each choice
pressing enter on each one so that the pop-up button changes to
the new choice. The pulldown menu's won't read when you press the
pop-up buttons, so you need to work with them this way at present.
I'll report as I find more, but this is certainly a great start
from Sun in making Virtualbox accessible for all users, and was a
nice early present that I definitely did not expect :).
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