Senate Responds to Web Site Accessibility Issue

Liz Horrell from the United States Senate has promptly responded to my
initial accessibility request indicating that the problem is being
worked. She also delivered us an alternative method of locating our
Senators.

Thank you for your e-mail and for alerting us to the problem. The
Webmaster has been notified and is looking into how to correct the
problem.

Screen readers will read the Senators Contact list. You can access this
by going to the Senator's tab (labeled Senators Home) on Senate.gov.
Once again thank you for your e-mail and we are working to correct the
problem.

Best Wishes,

Liz Horrell
On behalf of the Senate Webmaster

Coming up on Main Menu for the week of May 9

This week on Main Menu we hear again from Rick Harmon from the Blind Geek
Zone web site. He reviews for us JAWS for Windows Public Beta 2 on Windows
VISTA.

During the second hour of Main Menu Live we bring on Raul Gallegos from GW
Micro. Raul recently joined the GW Micro staff and he joins us to talk all
things Voice Sense, new Braille displays and updates concerning Window-Eyes
6.1. If you have any questions about these new products or have any
questions pertaining to Window-Eyes 6.1, then make sure to call into the
show.

The number to call into the show is 866-400-5333. You can also email your
questions to mainmenu@acbradio.org. You can also interact with the show via
MSN Messenger. The MSN Messenger ID to add is:

mainmenu@acbradio.org

Would you like to interact with a group of Main Menu listeners about the
topics heard on Main Menu and Main Menu Live? You can do this by joining the
Main Menu Friends email list. The address to subscribe is:
main-menu-subscribe@googlegroups.co. Come join an already lively group of
users.

Would you like to subscribe to podcasts feeds for Main Menu and Main Menu
Live? The RSS feeds to add to your podcatching application are:

Main Menu
http://www.acbradio.org/podcasts/mainmenu

Main Menu Live
http://www.acbradio.org/podcasts/mainmenulive

Main Menu and Main Menu Live can be heard on Tuesday evening at 9:00
Eastern, 6:00 Pacific, and at 1 universal on Wednesday morning on the ACB
Radio Main Stream channel. To listen to the show, just click this link:

http://www.acbradio.org/pweb/index.php?module=pagemaster&PAGE_user_op=view_page&PAGE_id=8&MMN_position=14:14

Jeff Bishop and Darrell Shandrow
The Main Menu Production Team

Visual Verification: Do Not Call Register failing blind

The Australian is reporting that the web site for the Australian equivalent
of the Do Not Call registry is inaccessible to the blind and visually
impaired as it requires passing a CAPTCHA. As we all know, this represents
no less than a "no blind people allowed" sign locking us out.

The Australian
Saturday, May 05, 2007

Do Not Call Register failing blind

By Simon Canning, Marketing writer

HUNDREDS of thousands of blind and vision-impaired people have been unable
to sign on to the Government's new Do Not Call register as questions
continue to arise about the decision to rush the system into action.

Call centre operators yesterday continued their criticism of the move,
saying the system could cost up to 30,000 jobs.

Human rights and disability discrimination commissioner Graeme Innes said
the failure of the Do Not Call website to allow vision-impaired people to
list their numbers was in breach of the Disability Discrimination Act.

Communications Minister Helen Coonan launched the register on Thursday, but
minutes after its unveiling, the computerised system had gone into meltdown,
unable to cope with thousands of people wanting to block phone marketers.

Mr Innes said the website for the federal Government's $33million register
contained features designed to stop fraudulent registrations. These required
people to copy a series of letters and numbers that had been altered to make
them impossible for hacking programs to read. But these could not be
accessed by the blind.

"We would expect that any Commonwealth Government website would comply with
access requirements," Mr Innes said. "It's been the law for several years."

The Do Not Call registration system was expected to handle 700,000
registrations an hour, but 36 hours after its launch had processed only
250,000.

http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,20867,21674764-2702,00.html

Showing Internet Explorer 7.0 How to Get Along with VIP Conduit

Are you having trouble accessing the chat rooms at http://www.vipconduit.com using Internet Explorer 7.0? Are you seeing various browser security related messages? Even though you know you have downloaded and installed the latest version of the VIP Communicator, is the client showing you strange error messages and unceremoniously closing? The solution is to add vipconduit.com to Internet Explorer’s “Trusted sites” zone and reduce the security of that zone. Here’s how to get that done:

  1. Open Internet Explorer 7 as usual.
  2. Press alt+t to pull down the Tools menu.
  3. Press o to select Options.
  4. Press Control+Tab to move to the Security page.
  5. Press tab to “select a web content zone”.
  6. Press right arrow until you reach “Trusted sites”.
  7. Press tab twice to move to the “security level” field.
  8. Press the End key to set the security level to “0 percent” which allows trusted sites to download, install and run most content without prompts.
  9. Press shift+tab to move to the “Sites” button, then press the space bar.
  10. If you are not already there, press shift+tab to move to the “Add this website to the zone” field.
  11. Press tab to select the Add button and press the space bar.
  12. Tab to the “Close” button and press the space bar.
  13. Tab to the OK button and press enter to dismiss the dialogue box and return to the browser window. You have now added vipconduit.com to the list of web sites that are implicitly trusted by your browser.

You can repeat this procedure for any sites you wish to use without running into frequent security related prompts displayed by means of Internet Explorer’s new info bar. Exercise extreme caution when adding a site to those trusted by Internet Explorer. It would be a very good idea for you to implicitly trust the authors of the web site before even thinking about asking your browser to do the same.

Serotek Remote Incident Manager Demo 1

Shownotes

As promised, Karen and I conducted a simple demonstration of the capabilities of Serotek’s Remote Incident Manager which promises to revolutionize remote accessibility for the blind and open up many more doors to employment. Please keep in mind that we received no prior training from Serotek. Nevertheless, we successfully carried off this first demonstration of the technology. This may be seen as a testament to the practicality and simplicity of this solution.

Download and Listen

Accessible Devices – Sunday’s TapMemo Presentation

We are pleased to announce that Nir Dvash, the developer of the New TapMemo Voice Activated Personal Data Assistant,, will be with us on Sunday May 6 th in the Accessible Devices Event Room  at VIP Conduit to present his product.  Be sure to mark your calendar for 2:00 PM Eastern on that date.  This will be a presentation you won’t want to miss.  We’re including some information about the TapMemo.  You’ll need to be with us on Sunday May 6 th to learn more.

TapMemo -Voice Activated Personal Data Assistant
TapMemo is a revolutionary, handheld, battery powered voice activated personal assistant.  It contains only one multi-functional button and two volume buttons. All verbal commands are Speaker Independent which means the user does not need to train the unit -it will work right out of the box.
 Some of the features include memos, phone book, calendar, alarm, unit locator and more.
 
We hope you’ll be with us for this presentation.  Access to the voice chat room for this event requires a free guest membership to VIP Conduit.  Visit http://www.vipconduit.com to sign up and join the event.
Parker, Terry and Randy

Writer of the Imagine Article Identified

I learned over on the FreedomBox forum that the writer of Imagine is Carl Jarvis, a blind man from Washington State. The article was apparently published in The Braille Forum, the American Council of the Blind’s monthly magazine, but I have not yet been able to locate the issue containing this work. I just want to make it clear that, at the time I redistributed the Imagine article, the writer had been anonymous for several years, and absolutely no plagiarism was intended.

DDD: Screaming Bag of Cats

My name is Darrell Shandrow.  I am Karen’s husband.  I help her maintain the Karen’s Corner blog.  I and a small group of others have been enjoying Karen’s Daily Doses (KDD) she has been sending us via e-mail for more than 14 months now.  I am so glad she decided to post some of them for the entire world to see.  Once in awhile, others in the group have created their own “daily doses”.  Mine are, of course, called Darrell’s Daily Dose (DDD). 
 
Yesterday, while working, I saw a post from a customer about how troubleshooting a particularly challenging technical issue was like a “screaming bag of cats”.  The visual from that was incredibly hillarious!  I decided to get it out of my system by writing a DDD.  You’ll see how it has turned into something of a statement concerning the human rights of the blind with respect to our need for equal access to technology.   I welcome all comments to either Karen’s or my blog. You may also e-mail me at editor@blindaccessjournal.com
 
It is now May 5, 2007,
and we are not in Heaven,
It is after noon at 12:57.
Today the weather is nice,
not too hot but not cold as ice,
Try Serotek System Access that would be my advice.
Yesterday I saw something funny,
While I was working and earning money.
A customer wrote a forum post,
Unintended but comedy he did make the most.
A VPN he was trying to fix,
but he was not running UNIX,
nor was he configuring a Pix,
and I saw his post well before six.
He said troubleshooting a VpN was like a “screaming bag of cats”,
not like a squirming box of rats,
nor ten thousand screeching blind bats,
not even like a flying gnat.
This made me laugh,
Caused me to write more than a paragraph.
The visual in my head is absolutely crazy,
It is not at all hazy,
Those screaming cats certainly would not be lazy.
Imagining a bunch of cats in a huge bag,
Tails they would most certainly wag.
But the wagging isn’t at all like a dog,
or even like a hog.
No, it is more like a swish made by the cats tail,
If in a bag it would be without fail,
They’d be screaming out of here please due us bail,
We are not the U.S. mail,
we don’t want to ride the light rail,
nor on a boat sail,
and we are not whales.
We are independent cats,
Some skinny others fat,
Nor are we hats.
Us you can’t just ship,
nor whip,
and this bag we will rip,
and definitely do not give us any lip!
We want out of this bag right now,
If you don’t know we will show you how,
You do not have to trade stocks on the Dow.
Louder and louder we scream,
not for ice cream,
and not as a team.
Freedom is what we seek,
and we are not weak,
but we will not stay in this bag for a week,
Into the light we shall one day peak,
for we are not freaks.
Our cat brethren we must rejoin,
not toss a coin,
but maybe some of us do live in Desmoins.
But on we scream and fight,
Truly organize someday we just might,
and we may just bite,
for access to the world and equal participation are our right!
We must be able to read every last byte!
Now we are listening to the Eighties Vault,
On the show goes without hault.
It is on ACB Radio Interactive,
and we the blind must never be passive.
It is not the end of the world as we know it,
and we must not have a fit,
but never must we quit,
nor do as we are often told and just sit,
No, we must be a big hit.
Sometimes accessibility issues are a “screaming bag of cats”,
But on the head we must not accept those pats.
All the same we must get out of our confining bag,
and never let the rest of the world impose a gag,
nor let our rights to equal access lag,
From the challenges we must not sag,
but the bad guys we sometimes must tag.
For the cats and the dogs are fighting more,
The battle for equal access is sometimes an outright war,
Most of the blind are still poor,
and some think accessibility is a bore,
The issues just are not core,
To us many still refuse to open the door,
Access is not just a favor,
and the capabilities of the blind are not folklore.
Equal access we must be granted,
For it sometimes we have ranted,
But we hope the seeds of change are being planted.
Better accessibility can bring us more jobs,
so we can purchase food such as corn cobbs,
and into the office use our key fobs,
and on that radio gear turn those knobs,
and jobs from us inaccessibility sometimes robbs.
So, the challenges ahead of us all are great,
We manage our own fate,
and must show the entire world that we do rate!

If they can’t get out of that bag, those screaming cats would certainly dye,
We must listen to their cry,
Never be shy.

A “screaming bag of cats”, the accessibility concerns can be,
and our assistive technology comes at such a high fee,
We can’t help it we are unable to see,
We must all accept the challenge, you and me.

Accessibility Issue on Senate.gov Web site

May 4, 2007

Dear U.S. Senate Webmaster,

I am a blind resident of Arizona and working taxpaying citizen of the
United States of America. I am writing to bring to your attention an
accessibility concern on the senate.gov web site. Essentially, it is
not currently possible for a blind person relying on a screen reader to
find their Senators. After selecting the state and pressing the Go
button, the contact information for the appropriate two Senators is not
provided as expected.

As a taxpaying citizen who has paid in part for the creation of this web
site, I am asking that you work to correct this issue so that blind and
visually impaired citizens may contact their Senators online. I look
forward to your prompt, effective response to my request.

Best regards,

Darrell Shandrow
Accessibility Evangelist
BlindAccessJournal.com