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Accessibility Guide
Accessibility Guide
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Installation Guide
Networking Guide
Power Management Guide
Release Notes
Security Guide
Technical Notes
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1. Introduction
2. Why should people choose Fedora as an accessibility solution?
2.1. The Section 508 Mandate
2.2. The Voluntary Product Accessibility Template (VPAT)
3. Available open source tools, utilities and drivers
3.1. Hardware
3.2. Software
4. Screen Readers
4.1. Orca for GNOME
4.2. Jovie for KDE
4.3. Using Emacspeak with Fedora
5. Screen Magnifiers
5.1. KMagnifier
6. Mouse Tools
6.1. KMouseTool
6.2. Mousetweaks
7. On_Screen_Keyboards
7.1. Indic Onscreen Keyboard
7.2. Florence
7.3. Dasher
8. Help for Linux Desktops
8.1. KDE
8.2. GNOME
8.3. XFCE
8.4. Sugar: Making computing accessible for children.
A. Revision History
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Accessibility Guide
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8. Help for Linux Desktops
Certain desktops have their own internal settings that can help with accessibility.
8.1. KDE
In KDE, keyboard and mouse settings can be configured in kcontrol. These settings are available by selecting
Personalization > Accessibility
. Additional information on Accessibility Tools in KDE can be found at
http://accessibility.kde.org/