• @DonutVeteran@lemmy.ml
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    03 years ago

    Well, honestly a lot of FOSS software has been lacking in usability in general, not even accessibility. It’s to be expected, as lots of software has basically been born from hobby projects and there is no unifying entity creating everything or defining human interface guidelines, besides perhaps GNOME and KDE.

    The thing is that there is a big emphasis in FOSS software to “implement yourself” the features needed because most work is volunteer driven. So unless someone or some organization were to fund a developer or two to implement accessibility features, they don’t magically come into being.

    • Kromonos
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      03 years ago

      I heard this “implement yourself” argument way too often. I really can’t understand such a thinking. It’s like selling a car and say, that everyone could change tires, including the mounting on new rims. 🤦 As if everybody is a software developer.

        • @DBGamer@lemmy.ml
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          -13 years ago

          Doesn’t matter it’s still a product at the end of the day. Just because it doesn’t costs anything doesn’t means you shouldn’t get much/anything in return beyond the software.

          Additionally think of it as a developer, don’t you want to keep the lights on? Food on the table and etc? Well how you gonna dope the donations? By becoming committed to your “consumers” and having them return the favors.

          You know what they says, what goes around comes back around. :)

          • @federico3@lemmy.ml
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            13 years ago

            product

            “something (such as a service) that is marketed or sold as a commodity” (Merriam Webster)

            “object or system made available for consumer use; it is anything that can be offered to a market to satisfy the desire or need of a customer” (Wikipedia)

            In short: paid software is a product. A volunteering effort is not a product, it’s a gift.

            Complaining about a gift not being good enough is quite entitled.

          • Ephera
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            13 years ago

            The vast majority of open-source devs don’t get donations or paid for it. We keep the lights on by having a day job, with the open-source work being only a hobby…