Yes. I'd love to help make not only KOffice but also KDE Qt apps work with speech and eventually Braille. A little about myself: I worked for years on a word processor used both by blind/visually impaired users and professional Braille publishers. The problem with providing speech support at levels other than the component level, such as a layer on top, is that the best speech software would know about internal structures and data, and not rely on what's on the screen. I'd like to provide support at the component level so that everything works elegantly for the user. My first question then, which is not political at all but practical, is will I be able to work on underlying components that KDE relies on to include speech capability in them. I know similar work is happening with gspeech in Gnome. Second, can't KDE eventually evolve for mobile use? If we can make it work well with limited screen real-estate or no screen (speech mode), why shouldn't people use it there. In a few years mobile devices will have much more memory and power! In fact, my funders (please keep this secret) currently develop a note-taker for blind people with speech and a refreshable braille line. A future version of their note-taker is going to run Linux. See where I'm going? I can work on both goals at once - mobile and blind use. Regards, Aaron Leventhal Shapeable Software P.S. My new email address is aaronl@chorus.net