Gnopernicus belongs to the GNOME Accessibility Project.
One of the most important features of Gnopernicus is its automated focus tracking and fullscreen magnification, which aids users who have low vision. In addition, the screen reader features of Gnopernicus allow users to access standard GTK+2 and Java-based GUI applications through speech and braille output. By leveraging the built-in accessibility framework of Gnome 2, Gnopernicus enables users to use the Gnome 2 desktop effectively, even if they may not have access otherwise.
To use Gnopernicus effectively, users will need to have certain requirements in place, such as cspi-1.0, gconf-2.0, glib-2.0, gtk+-2.0, gtk-doc (optional, but necessary for docs generation), libglade-2.0, libgnome-2.0, libgnomeui-2.0, libxml-2.0, gnome-speech-2.0, and gnome-mag-1.0.
In the latest release of Gnopernicus, there have been some new improvements made. For speech, a presentation for spread sheet cells has been added. There have also been some changes made to the magnifier feature, including a new presentation style for paragraphs, and zoomer boundaries that are now clamped to the screen boundaries.
Overall, Gnopernicus is an excellent software tool that can help users who have limited vision or are completely blind to interact with different applications and use the Gnome 2 desktop more efficiently. With its screen reader and magnifier features, users can access applications through speech and braille output, and the automated focus tracking and fullscreen magnification make it easier for users to navigate the desktop.
Version 1.1.0: N/A