Talking bios
Janina Sajka
janina at rednote.net
Wed Dec 24 12:54:09 EST 2003
Part of the problem in asking for sighted assistance with this kind of
stuff is that you become emeshed with your assistant's level of
competence in such matters. Generally, this means that you are severly
dumbed down, and can barely get anything accomplished. In my experience,
at least, the person helping is usually overwhelmed and can barely even
notice what needs to be seen on screen without careful coaching or even
gentle ego coddling.
I could go on, but that would just be self-serving.
Point is that we're not asking for anything new. We're asking for
something that most of us don't have experience with, though, because it
was common in an era before, and with higher end computers, than most of
us have had access to. I do think recognizing that access through
connected terminal devices is as old as computing helps our advocacy by
pointing out that what we need is as old as the hills. I think it serves
to make people more comfortable that they can deliver for us because
they're not necessarily inventing something new.
Alex Snow writes:
> From: Alex Snow <alex_snow at gmx.net>
>
> I don't give a damn if I have to connect a braille 'n squeak or any
> other device to my box as long as it makes the bios accessible. I hate
> getting sited help with this kind of stuff.
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