On Jun 11, 2011 5:27 AM, "Lisi" <lisi.re...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> On Saturday 11 June 2011 10:05:04 Ralf Mardorf wrote:
> > I've good luck, because I can skip a lot when watching at the monitor, I
> > guess using braille, people have to read much more irrelevant stuff.
>
> I'm fascinated.  How do you read braille from a monitor??!
>
> My blind friends (even one who can read Braille at a phenomenal rate) all
use
> text to speech software.  Though the point about difficulty scanning still
> holds good.
>
> That is not sarcasm incidentally.  I would genuinely like to know how you
can
> use braille to read things on the Internet.
>

Yeah, there are braille tablets with mechanical 'dots'. However they cost
some real money. Also as one who constantly brushes dust, skin, and hair off
my macbook, I have no idea how you'd keep one of those clean.

So, people I've seen prefer speech. This too wasn't a cheap solution as
windows software was $1k+ and a synthesizer was $200+. However, now most of
the work is strictly software and there are free software solutions; emacs
speak comes to mind (there's at least one other that I don't recall). There
used to be issues with speech software on X. There's also an issue if a
blind person needs access to the BIOS (though select computers used to
output info through the serial port, and servers have ipmi). There also used
to be an issue with remote apps on the windows side - I know Microsoft has
pretty much solved this on their end but I don't know about citrix.

Now, whatever the price of this adaptive software, most (all?) states in the
US have programs that pay for all necessary adaptive software / hardware and
training. Despite the large amount of money spent here, there are serious
issues with people who don't know hoe to write web pages. The other big
issue is new cell phones that have few physical buttons (I have been told
that the iPhone is better on this front than Android).

This is about 80% OT but you asked. I'm also sure that Google can get you
more reliable info on this topic than I. Hopefully if you design software or
web pages, you'll consider how you'd use it without eyes.

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