PPD files
Posted Dec 13, 2005 21:06 UTC (Tue) by
GreyWizard (subscriber, #1026)
In reply to:
PPD files by cventers
Parent article:
GNOME v. KDE, December 2005 edition
Your argument is dangerous to the future of the Linux desktop, if it is to have one!
Nonsense.
1) Accessability software enables a small portion of the public to do
something they couldn't otherwise.
While technically true this is simplistic. A commitment to support disabled users where possible speaks to the values of a society in a way that advanced laser printing does not.
2) Advanced printer configuration would enable a larger portion of the public to do something they couldn't otherwise.
Do you have sound statistical evidence to support this claim? Most of the printers people buy for their homes don't need PPD configuration and not all of those that do need it for basic features. Most advanced laser printers are installed in office environments where a system adminstrator can deal with configuration. In between there are people who are not affraid to read enough documentation to configure PPD files with or without a pretty graphical tool. Are the remaining users who have such printers and refuse to use the command line more numerous than the blind or elderly who need assistive technologies? I don't know. But don't pretend to know if you don't.
3) Learning to work with PPDs directly is not practical for the vast
majority of these users.
Really? So the vast majority of users who want advanced laser printing can't operate a search engine or read CUPS documentation?
4) Hiring an assistant to read the screen is not practical for the vast majority of disabled users.
Irrelevant. Even where it is practical assistive technology will cost less and provide more independence and privacy for such users.
1) Blind people can get around being blind on the computer by hiring an assistant, in theory. It would quite suck, but it's a *choice*.
2) Corporate users can get around not understanding PPD files by hiring a
assistant, in theory. It would quite suck, but it's a *choice*.
Do you really not see the glaring differences here? Corporate users generally call such assistants system administrators and they hire them regardless of whether they need to make advanced laser printer features. Asking them to spend an hour or two out of a year to deal with such a routine task is not comparable to asking a disabled person to have their experience with a computer mediated by a full time assistant.
But in any case, if your desktop design philosophy makes this expectation, how often do you suppose a user might run into these unrecoverable pot holes during their computing
experience, requiring the attention of a seasoned expert?
You don't know anything about my design philosophy, on the desktop or anywhere else. I don't particularly care whether the Gnome print dialog supports PPD configuration or not. Go ahead and use KDE if you are disappointed with the way Gnome works. Go ahead and encourage othersto do the same too. All I ask is that you stop pretending that support for disabled users and advanced laser printing are comparable. They're not.
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