Lotta Linux Links

Top: Software Applications: Accessibility Technology

blog | blog feed | podcast feed | ogg feed | forum


  • Accessibility - The Linux Foundation - The Open Accessibility Group functions within the Linux Foundation to establish free and open standards that enable comprehensive universal access to various computing platforms, applications, and services. What's Related?
  • BLINUX - Blind + Linux - Improved usability of Linux for blind people. What's Related?
  • Inference Group: Dasher Project: Home - A data entry interface incorporating language modelling and driven by continuous two-dimensional gestures, e.g. a mouse, a stylus, or eye-tracker. Intended for people with disabilities, but useful to a wider audience. What's Related?
  • KDE Accessibility Project - The goal of this project is to ensure that the KDE desktop is accessible to all users, including those with disabilities; includes the KTTS project, the Text-to-Speech System. What's Related?
  • Linux Accessibility Resource Site - A comprehensive summary of the work of the Linux accessibility community; includes information on what is currently being done to improve access; lists software projects, documentation, as well as community events. What's Related?
  • The Festival Speech Synthesis System - A general framework for building speech synthesis systems. What's Related?
  • The GNOME Accessibility Project - A suite of software services and support in GNOME that allows people with disabilities to utilize all of the functionality of the GNOME user environment. What's Related?
  • The MBROLA Project Homepage - The goal of this project is to collect a set of speech synthesizers for as many languages as possible, and provide them free for non-commercial and non-military applications. What's Related?
  • The espeak Homepage - A software speech synthesizer for English, and many other languages. What's Related?
  • The pVoice Software Homepage - Enabling the Disabled - An application that allows disabled children to communicate using symbols and speech synthesis. What's Related?


Google