New Linux PDA For Blind People
Lorenzo Taylor
lorenzo at taylor.homelinux.net
Thu Mar 30 12:55:03 EST 2006
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According to W. Nick Dotson:
# First, your grasp of economics is flawed, unless you insist on clinging to 60's style failed NeoMarxcist paradigms. Next,
# your decimal place with respect to the number of visually impaired people in the US is one place too far to the left, or
# your memory and imagination has moved it there.
You actually may be right with respect to the US. But the worldwide number is
at least that high. So it is still possible for manufacturers who keep their
costs low and their prices down to be able to easilly sell millions of units of
their product.
# The Apple Screen Reader is a primitive sop to keep school bids
# coming in, and still like any other screen reader, dependent upon the willingness of application programmers and
# marketroids to program in a manner acceptable to the standards being used for access by the screen reader.
I never said it was perfect, but unless all screen reader developers move to an
open source model, Apple's way is the only sort of good way for a company who
insists on making and/or using proprietary software to make their systems usable
by blind or visually impaired people without using price to discriminate against
them.
# Most visually impaired people, those with any residual vision cling to the use of that vision no matter how impaired it's
# functionality is, and cringe from the necessity to learn to access information with a divergent sensory modality from the
# one they think of as "normal" and "bespeaking being a "normal" person).
My point exactly. Make the "accessible" way the "normal" way. Then a blind
person won't feel blind using the product and won't feel that the price of what
he or she needs is discriminatory and he/she will feel comfortable using a
"normal" product just like everyone else.
# And, your idea of JFW shipping with Windows, would stifle progress in screen reader development. If you want imposed
# constraints on development, and price controls, I suggest you immigrate to a country with such a system then, see how
# happy you are with restricted choice.
I'm not happy with the choices that are available now. We already have
restricted choice, because the screen reader developers insist on making
proprietary technology that for the most part only works with proprietary
technology and charging a month's salary for it. The exception, of course, is
the Linux world, where most of the screen readers available are free and open
source, and the nice software synthesizers are relatively inexpensive. Yes,
they have their shortcomings for now from a technical standpoint, but they don't
take food out of my mouth to be able to put them on my computer. Until the
proprietary screen reader developers become enlightened, it is necessary for the
proprietary operating system developers to develope their own proprietary screen
readers for their own systems in order to keep the end price from being
prohibitive.
# I for one don't want any part of your cossetted Nannie State, and restricted
# market society.
And I for one have had enough of being descriminated against because I'm blind
and having companies that make products I need feel like they can charge
whatever they want for their products just because I need them. No matter what
some might think, I have done some research on this topic, and it makes me very
angry to see what these companies are doing, like taking hardware off the store
shelves that costs $100 to $150, putting a simple piece of software on them and
turning around and charging $900 or more for the same product. That is
discrimination and price gouging, both of which are supposed to be illegal in
this great country we live in.
Lorenzo
- --
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