GW Micro on Computer America Radio Show

When: April 24, 2007
Where: Computer America Show
Time: 10:05 PM – 11:00 PM Eastern Time USA
Website for stream is:
http://www.computeramerica.com

Tuesday
——-
Hour one: GW Micro. Since 1990, GW Micro has listened to screen-reader
users and incorporated many of their suggestions into one powerful product:
Window-Eyes. The result? A wide variety of speech features and the
flexibility needed for running many of today's most advanced Windows
applications. Hear about a screen reader that is adaptable to your specific
needs and likes, and yet work automatically enough for you to focus
attention on your application program, not so much on operating the screen
reader.

Accessible Devices Request For Help In Evaluating Braille Keyboard Program

Some of you may wish to take part in this.  This is all we have about it.
 
Hi All,
I was asked to review a demonstration version of a program that turns
your QWERTY keyboard into a braille keyboard. This is similar to what you find in many braille translation programs. The difference here is that this braille keyboard works in all applications.  It lets the user enter text in contracted or uncontracted braille using a word processor, e-mail, or what ever. Since braille only uses six keys, there is some indication that it may be a faster entry method than print letters for those who are familiar with the braille code.  Please give it a try and reply to the list, to me, or to the reply section on their web site. I think you’ll find it an interesting program. You can download the demonstration version at http://www.oss-globe.com/sbk.
I, nor AFB, are endorsing this product in any way, but I am simply providing it as information.  Be sure to select Version 1.3 and read the setup instructions before installing it on your computer.
Have fun,
Ike
Ike Presley

Menus That Talk(TM) – Restaurant Menus Get Table Smarts

PR Newswire
Wednesday, April 18, 2007

Menus That Talk(TM) – Restaurant Menus Get Table Smarts

Miami company introduces portable electronic menus that speak; uniquely
serves the special needs of the visually impaired, elderly and non-English
speaking guests

MIAMI, April 18 /PRNewswire/ — Taylannas Inc. announces the launch of
an electronic restaurant menu system, Menus That Talk(TM), a portable,
compact device, approximately the size of a DVD case, that speaks to
restaurant guests, describing selected food items from the hand-held unit's
illuminated buttons.
A lighted array of buttons displays major menu categories like DRINKS,
APPETIZERS and SEAFOOD. Guests simply press a button corresponding to a
category and hear brief descriptions of cuisine, wine suggestions, sides
and prices. At the touch of a button, Menus That Talk describes what's for
dinner.
No habla ingles? No problem: Just press the language button for Spanish
or another language. No more squinting in dim light or turning page after
page of complex printed menus. No more awkward conferences with busy
waiters.
Ready to order? A Service button pages your waiter. For the visually
disabled, the buttons are also imprinted in Braille. Guests who can't see
the button names and don't use Braille can browse the menu simply by
tapping buttons to hear categories. Another tap brings up the details.
In noisy restaurants or for the hearing-impaired, Menus That Talk
features a detachable hand-held earphone. The earphone also interfaces with
Tele-coil equipped hearing-aids.
Menus That Talk(TM) serves the needs and comforts of all restaurant
patrons with its simple layout, ease of use and ability to deliver voice
anywhere in the restaurant. Benefits for the restaurants include
streamlining menu selections, reducing server assistance time and bringing
the menu to a larger, appreciative audience.
"Menus should be able to communicate without being a challenge," said
President and CEO Susan Perry. "We're making a restaurant's entire menu
available to all its customers, and we're making it a pleasurable
experience."
The idea originated in an Olive Garden restaurant where Ms. Perry was
having lunch with her niece Jessica, a pretty 24-year-old with advanced
macular degeneration who cannot read a menu from any distance. Jessica
asked her aunt to please read the menu to her. Susan had forgotten to bring
her reading glasses. They laughed about it, but Susan thought, "Why
shouldn't menus be able to talk?"
Menus That Talk(TM) premieres to the public at the National Restaurant
Association show in Chicago, May 19-22, 2007.
More: http://www.menusthattalk.com

Contacts:
Susan Perry, President, CEO
susan.perry@menusthattalk.com
305-255-9600

Richard Herbst, VP Marketing
richard.herbst@menusthattalk.com
cell: 786-449-9351

SOURCE Taylannas Inc.
Related links:
http://www.menusthattalk.com

http://www.prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/stories.pl?ACCT=104&STORY=/www/story/04-18-2007/0004567978&EDATE=

Perkins adds voice to suit against US

The Boston Globe, USA
Thursday, April 19, 2007

Perkins adds voice to suit against US

By Stephanie V. Siek, Globe Staff

Take out a $1 bill, $5 bill, and a $10 bill. Now close your eyes. Can you
tell which is which?

Now imagine trying to buy a candy bar, or pay for a bus ticket, or get
change from a taxi driver. You are left dependent upon the honesty and good
will of others to avoid being cheated.

A Watertown institution, the Perkins School for the Blind, is offering
support to a legal battle to force the United States to do what such
countries as Canada, China, Gambia, Bangladesh, Australia and the members of
the European Union already do: Print currency that is distinguishable by
people who can't see.

The United States was the only one out of 171 currency-issuing bodies that
lacked bills with features to help nonsighted or low-vision people tell
different denominations apart, according to a 1995 study by the National
Academy of Sciences. Other countries use such methods as different sizes for
each denomination, embossed numbers or symbols, high-contrast colors, and
large-print numbers.

The American Council of the Blind in 2002 filed a lawsuit alleging that the
US Treasury discriminated against the visually impaired by repeatedly
failing to redesign its paper money in a way that would allow it to be
readily distinguishable. In November, a federal court judge ruled in the
council's favor. The government is appealing the decision.

Last week, two Yale University School of Law students came to the Perkins
School to interview students, staff, and community members. The testimony
will be used to prepare a friend-of-the-court brief offering the school's
position on the case.

The issue is one with particular relevance for one of the law students,
Cyrus Habib, who has been blind since birth.

After US District Judge James Robertson's decision last fall, Habib
approached one of his professors, Harold Hongju Koh, who is also the law
school's dean and is notable for his work in civil and human rights cases.

"He said, 'Someone should really write an amicus brief on this,' " said
Habib, referring to the "friend" filing. "I didn't realize at the time that
was code for 'Get busy.' "

But eventually he did, along with classmate Jon Finer. Koh is supervising
the pair's work.

"People shouldn't have to rely on other people to do something," said Habib,
referring to how visually impaired people need help at the cash register.
"This is deeply American — the idea of being an individual, being
independent."

"A day like this is fantastic," Finer said after the two first-year law
students met with Perkins students last Friday. "It pushes the issue forward
just being here."

But t he currency issue isn't just a consumer issue for visually impaired
people; it also can affect their job opportunities.

Perkins student Cory Kadlik, 16, discovered this when he called a deli near
his home in Medway about a part-time job that would involve working the cash
register. The owner turned him down, saying that dishonest customers could
take advantage of Kadlik.

"I feel bad for them because they want to give you the job, but they can't,"
Kadlik said of potential employers like the deli owner. "It kills them to do
that. I feel bad and they feel bad, it's a mess. I just cry."

One of the school's social workers, in a later session, agreed.

"The ability to manage your own money, to be independent in that way. . .
that's so greatly affected," said Jim Witmer. "The simplest of transactions
and purchases requires some sort of assistance. They don't have the access
their peers do, and built into that is learning mathematics, learning social
interactions."

Tyler Tarrasi, a 17-year-old from Framingham, said he feels at a
disadvantage to sighted teens his age looking for work in a store. "When you
can't read the money, you can't have the job."

There are more than 3 million blind or low-vision people in the United
States, according to the National Eye Institute, and not all of them agree
with the American Council of the Blind's position. The National Federation
of the Blind called Robertson's decision "dangerously misguided," and argued
that such efforts distract from more important problems, such as lack of
access to information in Braille and other formats.

"The blind need jobs and real opportunities to earn money, not feel-good
gimmicks that misinform the public about our capabilities," the federation's
president, Dr. Marc Maurer, said in a statement after the November court
decision. The ruling, he went on to say, "argues that the blind cannot
handle currency or documents in the workplace and that virtually everything
must be modified for the use of the blind. An employer who believes that. .
. will have a strong incentive not to hire a blind person."

Almost 38,000 people in Massachusetts are legally or totally blind,
according to the Massachusetts Commission for the Blind.

The US government's defense is that failing to have discernible currency may
be an inconvenience, but it is not discriminatory. It also maintained that
redesigning paper money would be too expensive, an argument that Robertson
rejected.

Using estimates from the federal Bureau of Engraving and Printing, he
reasoned that the most expensive design option, making bills in different
sizes, would cost up to $228 million initially and $52 million more per year
than the current design. He noted the cost would amount to "only a small
fraction" of the bureau's budget.

"Over the past 10 years — and two redesigns — the BEP has spent $4.2
billion on currency production, an average of $420 million per year,"
Robertson said in his decision. He added that if adaptive features were
incorporated into a pre planned redesign, "the total burden of adding such a
feature would be even smaller."

As an alternative to using redesigned cash, the Treasury's lawyers said,
blind people could use digital currency readers, or pay for items with debit
or credit cards.

Habib said plastic cards are often useless in such daily transactions as
buying candy or a subway ticket. Besides, he said, he still needs a sighted
person to verify that a credit card receipt is correct.

As for currency readers, they are costly, heavy, and are unreliable with
worn bills, advocates for the blind say.

The federal government also said the visually impaired can identify paper
money by developing their own money-handling techniques, such as folding
each denomination a different way, or keeping bills in different pockets.

In response, blind people note that they still have to rely on others to
make sure they receive or give the correct change.

Alison Roberts of Waltham is a co founder of OurMoneyToo.org, an
Internet-based organization fighting for currency change. At a meeting with
Habib and Finer, she demonstrated a commonly used reader. The Note Teller
took more than two minutes to "read" five bills, and the newly redesigned
$20 bill wasn't recognized at all.

"Imagine you're the person behind me in line," said Judi Cannon, who is
blind and a Braille services specialist at Perkins.

Or, Roberts added, imagine you're a cashier, trying to use the Note Teller
to count up the day's receipts.

Jason Campbell, a 21-year-old Perkins student, said not being able to handle
money reinforces stereotypes about blind people.

"They think blind people can't do much," he said. If they don't give you a
chance, you can't prove them wrong. And maybe they don't want to be proven
wrong."

Stephanie V. Siek can be reached at ssiek@globe.com.

http://www.boston.com/news/local/articles/2007/04/19/perkins_adds_voice_to_suit_against_us/?page=full

Making The Case for E-Commerce Site Accessibility

Hello All:

I am working with a market research firm in Chicago that wants to make the
case to on-line e-commerce sites such as on-line grocery shopping services
that it makes good business sense to make their sites accessible to people
who are blind or visually impaired that use screen reading and screen
magnifying software. There is a lot of potential for this work which may
include developing something to put onto various on-line sites or that
someone could get which would cause an on-line site to detect that you are
using a screen reader or magnifier and present a different view of the site
for you.

Right now, this company is looking to find out some demographic data about
people who are blind or visually impaired. I have been on the phone to AFB
and I've got the 10 million number of people who are blind in the United
States. At this point, this company wants to focus on the United States.
There is some other information they want such as:
1. How many people who are blind or visually impaired use computers and the
internet?
2. What is the spending power of people who are blind or visually impaired?
In other words, how much disposable income do they have?
3. How often do those using computers and the internet do business at
on-line shopping sites? Would they spend more time and money shopping
on-line if sites were more accessible?
4. Is lack of accessibility to on-line shopping sites the primary reason
they do not do more shopping on-line? What other reasons, if any, do they
not shop on-line?

What I'm wondering is, has anyone done research to gather this kind of
information? If so, how recently was that done and are there any reports of
any findings that I can get ahold of?

We are also pursuing other avenues. For example, we're contacting the
various screen reader and screen magnifier vendors to find out how many
active licenses they have throughout the United States. This will help us
get a rough idea of how many people are using computers out there. I've
been told by Jay Leventhal at AFB that the vendors are pretty secretive with
this information.

Anyway, if anyone knows of recent research findings in this area, I'd
appreciate learning of them. You can contact me at work by phone or e-mail.
Call 888-825-0080 or e-mail ray.campbell@chicagolighthouse.org.

Thanks,

Ray Campbell

Letter: The U.S. Citizenship Test,for applicants who are blind or visually impaired

I am concerned about a couple of points made in this response to questions
regarding the accessibility of the citizenship interview process. First,
and most obviously, I feel that blind and visually impaired people should
not be exempted from any requirement due to their disability, but that all
requirements ought to be made accessible in audio, Braille and large print
formats to meet all needs.

Second, I believe it is unacceptable for the blind or visually impaired
person to need to bring their own sighted assistance to complete and sign
the paperwork. Instead, the interviewer needs to be willing to assist the
person with these tasks. The letter below states that such a person may be
brought along to assist, but does not state that as a requirement, so,
hopefully, interviewers are able to provide this needed assistance if the
applicant comes without a sighted person in tow.

If any Blind Access Journal readers have undergone the citizenship process,
I would be very interested in knowing how it went for you, especially with
respect to its accessibility. Please feel free to comment to this post or
e-mail editor@blindaccessjournal.com with testimonial evidence or any other
interesting, relevant information.

KAIZEN Program, WA, USA
Tuesday, April 17, 2007

Letter: The U.S. Citizenship Test, for applicants who are blind or visually
impaired

By Sylvie Kashdan, M.A.

This email was kindly forwarded by Mary Turner of the Central Coast Center
for Independent Living in California, after we tried to assist with a
research enquiry. It's not technically news but was recieved today and
could be very useful information for some people. Leon Gilbert, blindnews
mailing list volunteer (Middlesex, UK, 17/4/07).

Hello Jeannie and Leon,

I have now obtained quite an extensive reply to my inquiry about the US
citizenship test being offered in Braille. I am sending along the reply for
your information. Thanks for your help in getting an answer to my question.

Mary Turner, MPH
Central Coast Center for Independent Living
234 Capitol Street, Suites A & B
Salinas, CA 93901
831.757.2968 X15
831.757-5549 fax
mturner at cccil.org
(ENCS)

KAIZEN Program for New English Learners with Visual Limitations, WA, USA

—– Original Message —–
From: "Kaizen Program" <kaizen at literacyworks.org>
To: <mturner at cccil.org>
Sent: Tuesday, April 17, 2007 2:52 PM
Subject: question about citizenship test for applicant who is blind

Hello Mary,

This is Sylvie Kashdan of the Kaizen Program for New English Learners With
Visual Limitations. Joe Harcz forwarded your question to me.

We have assisted a number of visually impaired and blind immigrants in
becoming citizens, so I am quite familiar with how it can be done.

The citizenship test is not now currently available in braille although it
legally should be under the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, section 504. We are
conducting a campaign to ask Senators and Representatives to require the
government to make the redesigned naturalization/citizenship test and all
preparation materials, including the N400 form available in all accessible
formats, including braille, large print, electronic text and audio
recording.

However, currently, people who are blind or have low vision can have the
oral interview and be exempted from the reading and writing part. They must
do two things:

1. They must indicate on the N400 form in the space that asks if they can
read and write in English that they are legally blind, and can only read and
write using braille or large print, or that they can only answer orally.

2. Along with their completed N400 form, they should also provide a copy
of a letter from an eye doctor, rehabilitation professional or other
qualified
professional indicating that they are indeed legally blind.

An applicant who is blind or has low vision can also request that she or he
be accompanied during the interview by a sighted guide, who will not provide
any prompting for answers to questions, but will act as a guide and assist
the applicant in presenting various print material upon request and signing
the photograph with the very small signature that is required. If the
applicant does not feel she or he needs such a guide, it is certainly
optional.

Before the interview/exam, the applicant needs to practice answering all the
questions on the N400 form orally as well as learning more than the 100
questions by heart. She or he also needs to practice making that very small
signature, which many people find difficult.

If the interviewer is hesitant to exempt the applicant from the reading and
writing part of the interview/exam, the applicant needs to ask her or him
to read the entry about her or his blindness that has been made on the N400
form and to read the letter certifying blindness from the qualified
professional. If the interviewer is still hesitant to exempt the applicant
from the reading and writing parts of the interview/exam, the applicant
should politely ask to speak to the supervisor, because it is her or his
legal right to be exempted if the material is not available in the reading
medium she or he uses, and if there is no one available to read braille for
those who can only write with braille.

Applicants who can write large print should indicate that. Some interviewers
will write sentences in large print for such people to read too. They should
be asked to print clearly so that the applicant is not challenged by the
formation of the letters.

Those applicants who are braille users should offer to spell words in
sentences instead of writing. That is usually satisfactory.

Let me know if you need more information. If the citizenship applicant who
is blind wishes to contact me directly, I will be glad to help her or him in
whatever way I can.

Sincerely,

Sylvie

Sylvie Kashdan, M.A.
Instructor/Curriculum Coordinator
KAIZEN PROGRAM for New English Learners with Visual Limitations
810-A Hiawatha Place South
Seattle, WA 98144, U.S.A.
phone: (206) 784-5619
email: kaizen at literacyworks.org
web:

http://www.nwlincs.org/kaizen/

http://www.nwlincs.org/kaizen/


BlindNews mailing list

To contact a list moderator about a problem or to make a request, send a
message to BlindNews-Owner@BlindProgramming.com

The BlindNews list is archived at: http://GeoffAndWen.com/blind/

To address a message to all members of the list, send mail to:
BlindNews@blindprogramming.com

Access your subscription info at:

http://blindprogramming.com/mailman/listinfo/blindnews_blindprogramming.com

To unsubscribe via e-mail: send a message to
BlindNews-Request@BlindProgramming.com with the word unsubscribe in either
the subject or body of the message

Track-IT Scripts?

I am working with an organization that is utilizing the Track-it
Technician and Help desk application produced by Numara Software. I
have had very limited success using v7.0 of this software with JAWS 8.
Is anyone aware if scripts for any version of this software have ever
been created? Any information is greatly appreciated.

Regards

Jim Denham

Assistive Technology Coordinator

Perkins School for the Blind

175 North Beacon Street

Watertown, MA 02472

Office: (617) 972-7472

jim.denham@perkins.org

www.perkins.org

All we see is possibility!

Coming up on Main Menu and Main Menu Live for the week of April 18, 2007

This week on Main Menu we hear from Dave Williams from Dolphin. He will
talk to us all about the new version of Smart Hal for Smart Phone devices.

Before we bring on our guest live, we will again hear from Jamie Pauls from
Access Watch all about adding RSS feeds to Internet Explorer 7.0.

During the second hour, we bring Dave Williams on to take your questions all
about all of Dolphin's product line. At CSUN this year they made some
announcements concerning their Vista release and we find out more about that
along with the rest of the Dolphin product line.

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.com

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_p
age&PAGE_id=8&MMN_position=14:14

Jeff Bishop and Darrell Shandrow
The Main Menu Production Team

Re: [Main Menu Friends] Coming up on Main Menu for the week of April 11th, 2007

Hello Main Menu Listeners,

 

This week we bring on Earle Harrison from Handy Tech North America.  During the first hour we present:

 

* Earle brings us a Mobile Speak Smart Phone Demo from Code Factories product line.

 

*  Earle then talks with us about new advances with Handy Tech Braille displays and Handy Tech North America’s role as Exclusive

Master distributor for Handy Tech Products in the U.S.

and Canada.   

 

Then in the next hour we open up the phone lines for you to call in and ask any questions you may have concerning all of the products that Handy Tech sells.  One of the things we want to explore is the difference between Symbian and Smart Phone technology.  Why would you want one over the other?  What phones and versions of Smart Phone technology are supported?  We explore this, your calls and much more this week on Main Menu Live.

 

We will also hear from Access Watch all about Nod32.

 

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 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.  Don’t forget that this will be a 2 hour show.

 

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
Main Menu Producer

Fw: Ronnie Milsap on the Next Marlaina

—– Original Message —–
From: "Marlaina Lieberg on ACB Radio" <marlaina@acbradio.org>
To: <friends@acbradio.org>; <announce@acbradio.org>
Sent: Saturday, April 07, 2007 8:50 AM
Subject: Ronnie Milsap on the Next Marlaina

Once in every year, Ronnie Comes along
and spends time with us here,
to share his life and songs!

Ok, so I'm not a song writer, but Ronnie is, and he's coming to join us
Easter Sunday night in North America from 9 to 11 PM, 6 to 8 PM Pacific,
that's Monday at 1 UTC.

In addition to being heard via the Mainstream, listeners can check the ACB
Radio Cafe stream as well, for if plans work out as they usually do, we'll
be simulcasting Ronnie on both the Mainstream and the cafe to ensure there's
room enough for everyone who wants to listen!

Ronnie has sent me some music that is special to him that he would like to
highlight as important pieces in his life. I've heard them all, and they
are ultimate Ronnie as you've likely not experienced before all in one
session.

Ronnie will visit with us for the entire 2 hours, so we'll do all we can to
get as many callers in as possible. When you call, please turn your
computer down once the phone is answered. Please be as brief as you can,
and if you ask a question, please be prepared to listen on the computer for
your answer from Ronnie. In this way, we can get as many calls in while
still having an opportunity to highlight much of the music Ronnie feels is
special to him.

Marlaina is heard on ACB Radio Mainstream.
It all starts on Sunday night at 9 PM Eastern, 6 Pacific, which is Monday
morning at 1 Universal. The program will replay for 24 hours, and of
course, is available via podcast from the ACB Radio replay page. As always,
we'll take your calls at our toll-free number, 866 666 7926.

Please save this message and click the link below on Sunday at 9 PM Eastern,
6 Pacific or Monday at 1 Universal to listen. Ronnie Milsap and I can't wait
to spend time with you there! Feel free to distribute this message to
others whom you think may be interested.

As always, thank you so much for your continued support of my ACB Radio
work!

Marlaina
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