Archive for the ‘Computing’ Category

Tech chat 53 – Tribute to george Buys, iBill Talking Currency Identifier, and Setting Up a New Computer

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

Tech Chat 53 began by paying our respects to George Buys, who lost his life to emphysema. We gave a brief demo of the newly released

iBill Talking Currency Identifier from Orbit Research.

We then covered setting up a new computer using Microsoft Windows XP or Windows 7. We discussed buying new vs. upgrading an existing computer, getting past the Out Of Box Experience, installing speech, updating drivers, Windows updates, wireless internet, removing unwanted preinstalled software, transferring software and music from the old to the new computer, plus questions from participants.
Listen to Tech Chat 53 – Tribute to George Buys, Demo of ibill Talking Currency Identifier, and Setting Up a New computer

 

The Serotek Ultimatum

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

Serotek declares war on the traditional adaptive technology industry and their blind ghetto products.

by Mike Calvo

With this announcement we are sending out a call to arms to every blind person and every advocate for the blind to rise up and throw off the tyranny that has shaped our lives for the past two decades. It is a tyranny of good intentions – or at least what began as good intentions. But as the proverb says, “the road to hell is paved with good intentions.” And for the past two decades the technologies originally conceived to give us freedom have been our shackles. They have kept us tied down to underperforming, obscenely expensive approaches that only a small percentage of blind people can afford or master. They have shackled us to government largess and the charity of strangers to pay for what few among us could afford on our own. And we have been sheep, lead down the path, bleating from time to time, but without the vision or the resources to stand up and demand our due. That time is past. We stand today on the very edge of universal accessibility. Mainstream products like the iPod, iPhone, and newly announced iPad are fully accessible out of the box. And they bring with them a wealth of highly desirable accessibility applications. The cost to blind people is exactly the same as the cost to sighted people. It’s the same equipment, the same software, the same functionality, and fully accessible. What Apple  has done, others are doing as well. The adaptive technology vendor who creates hardware and software that is intended only for blind folks, and then only if they are subsidized by the government, is a dinosaur. The asteroid has hit the earth, the dust cloud is ubiquitous, the dinosaur’s days are numbered. But dinosaurs are huge, and their extinction does not happen overnight.. Even as they die, they spawn others like them (take the Intel Reader for example). Thank you, no. Any blind person can have full accessibility to any type of information without the high-cost, blind-ghetto gear. They can get it in the same products their sighted friends are buying. But let’s face it; if we keep buying that crap and keep besieging our visual resource center to buy that crap for us, the dinosaurs of the industry are going to keep making it. Their profit margins are very good indeed. And many have invested exactly none of that profit in creating the next generation of access technology, choosing instead to perpetuate the status quo. For instance, refreshable braille technology, arguably the most expensive blindness-specific(and to many very necessary) product has not changed significantly in 30 years. Yet, the cost remains out of reach for most blind people. Where’s the innovation there? Why have companies not invested in cheaper, faster, smaller, and more efficient ways to make refreshable braille? Surely the piezo electric braille cell  is not the only way? And what about PC-based OCR software? It’s still around a thousand dollars per license, yet core functionality hasn’t changed much; sure, we get all sorts of features not at all related to reading, along with incremental accuracy improvements, but why are these prices not dropping either, especially when you consider that comparable off-the-shelf solutions like Abbyy Finereader  can be had for as low as $79? ? And let’s not forget the screen reader itself, the core technology that all of us need to access our computers in the first place. Do we see improvements, or just an attempt to mimic innovation  with the addition of features which have nothing to do with the actual reading of
the screen, while maintaining the same ridiculous price point. This maintaining of the status quo will, inevitably, face an enormous crash, worse than the transition from DOS to Windows based accessibility. You can expect a technology crash that will put users of the most expensive accessibility gear out of business. Why? I won’t bore you with all the technical details, but the basic story is that some of these products have been kept current with patches and fixes and partial rewrites and other tricks we IT types use when we haven’t got the budget to do it right, but we need to make the product work with the latest operating system. That process of patching and fixing creates an enormous legacy barrier that makes it impossible to rewrite without abandoning all who came before. But you can only keep a kluge working for so long before it will crumble under its own weight. That, my friends, is exactly where some of the leading adaptive technology vendors find themselves today. There are exceptions. Serotek is an exception because we have completely recreated our product base every three years. GW Micro  is an exception because they built their product in a highly modular fashion and can update modules without destroying the whole. KNFB is an exception because they take advantage of off-the-shelf technologies, which translate ultimately into price drops and increased functionality. But even we who have done it right are on a path to obsolescence. The fundamental need for accessibility software is rapidly beginning to vanish. The universal accessibility principles we see Apple, Microsoft, Olympus, and others putting in place are going to eliminate the need for these specialty products in a matter of just a very few years. Stop and think. Why do you need accessibility tools? To read text? E-book devices are eliminating that need. None of them are perfect yet, but we are really only in the first generation. By Gen2 they will all be fully accessible. To find your way? GPS on your iPhone or your Android based phone will do that for you. To take notes? Easy on any laptop, netbook, or iPad. Heck, you can record it live and play it back at your convenience. Just what isn’t accessible? You can play your music, catch a described video, scan a spreadsheet, take in a PowerPoint presentation – all using conventional, off-the-shelf systems and/or software that is free of charge. There are still some legacy situations where you need to create an accessibility path. Some corporations still have internal applications that do not lend themselves to modern devices. There will certainly be situations where a specialized product will better solve an accessibility problem than a mainstream one, especially in the short term. We don’t advocate throwing the baby out with the bathwater, but we do advocate that we begin to hasten the inevitable change by using accessible mainstream solutions wherever possible. Even now, the leading edge companies are reinventing their internal systems with accessibility as a design criteria, so the situations that require specialized products will certainly become fewer as time goes on. If our current Assistive technology guard’s reign is coming to an end, why the war? Why not just let it die its own, natural, inevitable death? Because nothing dies more slowly than an obsolete technology. Punch cards hung on for twenty or thirty years after they were completely obsolete. The same is true for magnetic tape. Old stuff represents a comparatively large investment, and people hate to throw away something they paid a lot of money for even if it’s currently worthless. But that legacy stuff obscures the capabilities of the present. It gets used in situations where other solutions are cheaper and more practical. The legacy stuff clogs the vocational rehab channel, eating up the lion’s share of the resources but serving a tiny portion of the need . It gets grandfathered into contracts. It gets specified when there is no earthly reason why the application requires it. The legacy stuff slows down the dawning of a fully accessible world. It hurts you and it hurts me. To be sure, I make my living creating and selling products that make our world accessible. But first and foremost, I am a blind person. I am one of you. And every day I face the same accessibility challenges you face. I have dedicated my life and my company to making the world more accessible for all of us, but I can’t do it alone. This is a challenge that every blind person needs to take up. We need to shout from the rooftops: “Enough!” We need to commit ourselves in each and every situation to finding and using the most accessible off the shelf tool and/or the least-cost, highest function accessibility tool available. With our dollars and our commitment to making known that our needs, and the needs of sighted people, are 99% the same, we can reshape this marketplace. We can drive the dinosaurs into the tar pits and nurture those cute fuzzy little varmints that are ancestors to the next generation. We can be part of the solution rather than part of the problem. And all it takes is getting the best possible solution for your specific need. Once you have found the solution to fill that need, let the company know you appreciate their work towards better accessibility. Let your friends (sighted and blind) know about these accessibility features; they probably don’t know that such features exist. Make your needs known to the vocational rehab people you are working with, and don’t allow them to make recommendations for a specific technology for no other reason than that it’s been in the contract for years. Make sure your schools and your workplace understand the need to push technology in to the accessible space. Show them the low-cost alternatives. In this economy some, the intelligent ones, will get it and the tide will begin to turn. And then in short order the tsunami of good sense will wash away the old, and give us the space to build a more accessible world for all of us. Let the demand ring out loud and clear and the market will follow. If this message rings true to you, don’t just shake your fist in agreement and leave it at that. let your voice be heard! Arm yourself with the vision of a future where there are no social, conceptual, or economic barriers to accessibility, and let your
words and your actions demonstrate that you will not rest until that vision is realized. Take out your wallet and let your consumer power shine! You do matter as a market. People! You have kept this company alive with your money for 8 years this month! I believe that if we all get together and do our part, we will finally say “NO more!” same old same old! Join the revolution! Together we can change the world!

 

Two New CAPTCHA solving Solutions

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

Below is the text from an email I received, along with my two cents.

Solona teams up with independent developers to make Captcha Solving much easier with new API programs: Qwitter and SendToSolona.

It is well-known that Captchas, those text-in-image security devices that websites use to detour spam efforts, are a blatant barrier for screen-reader users. Solving inaccessible Captchas quickly and independently is now easier than ever before.

Solona, the popular Human Powered Captcha Solution Service,

is now integrated into two independent programs:

Windows users can use Qwitter,

and Mac users can use SendToSolona.

Qwitter, the popular Twitter Client developed by Christopher Toth and his team, now includes a session that interfaces with Solona for Captcha solving. The Qwitter development team did a fantastic job of making Captcha solving as easy as one keystroke! The Qwitter/Solona session incorporates all the functions necessary for fast Captcha solving: operator status, user authentication, image capture, image upload, code retrieval, and it even copies the code to your local clipboard so all you have to do is paste the code into the appropriate edit field. It doesn’t get any easier!

There is tremendous value and advantage for a user to use the Qwitter client to solve Captchas over the Solona website interface: speed, automation and image accuracy. The Solona website interface is always available. However, API programs such as Qwitter offer a much more streamlined Captcha solving experience. Your transaction continues to be anonymous – no operator will know who you are, and you will not know who the operator is. If you hate to ask a sighted person to look over your shoulder just to solve a Captcha for you, check out theSolona website, and then download the Qwitter client to start solving Captchas easily and independently. You will be amazed at how easy it is to negotiate inaccessible Captchas!

Are you a Mac user? Have trouble solving Captchas independently? Don’t worry, there’s an app for that! Theresa Ford developed an easy-to-use application called SendToSolona so that Mac users can easily, quickly, and independently solve Captchas. Check out the SendToSolona Web page.

SendToSolona makes Captcha solving easy and fast from the terminal window. The program integrates all the functionality so all you have to do is generate the image, and type one command. Within a matter of seconds, the solution to your Captcha will be copied in to your local clip board for you to paste where appropriate.

If you’re a Windows user, take a moment to check out the Official Qwitter site . If you’re a Mac user, visit Theresa Ford’s site. Also, keep an eye out for new programs that will incorporate Solona functionality. I strongly recommend people to use API integration programs when solving Captchas via Solona. You can still use the native Solona website interface to solve Captchas. That will always be available to you if you don’t have access to an API program (perhaps you’re at a public computer). The Solona website Captcha solving interface is a universal-access tool: it works with all operating systems, browsers, and websites.

Do not let the inaccessibility of Captchas prevent you from accomplishing your goals! There are resources that you can use to independently solve Captchas. Visit the Solona website and learn about independent Captcha solving today, and check out our other services as well!

Solona is a completely free service for users. There is no cost to solve Captchas, and there is no marketing to the users. We provide a clean and easy-to-use interface that allows people to independently solve Captchas.

Bernard Maldonado

 

And now my two cents!

We at SeroTalk are very excited about these two CAPTCHA solving solutions, one for the PC, and one for the Mac. However, it is more important than ever, that we now don’t sit on our hands, and assume we no longer need to be concerned wit this issue. Companies are looking at deploying alternative methods that will impair our ability to use their products and services. We need to advocate for our full access to web sites, especially important now that companies are putting their services in the cloud, and in some cases, requiring we solve a CAPTCHA before using their services, or purchasing their products.

We hope you will join us Thursday Feb. 25 at 9PM Eastern for Tech Chat 52, which will discuss tips for effective advocacy. With publishers wanting to charge us extra for text-to-speech, budget cuts reducing transportation options, inaccessible software, voting independently, ATM access, inaccessible touch screens, etc., we each need to give a little bit. We have the technology, now all we need is the vision, and motivation to see our dreams become reality. If each of us chooses just one project to passionately pursue, we as a collective community will be unstoppable!

Hats off to Bernard Maldonado and the volunteers at Solona, Christopher Toth with Qwitter, and Theresa Ford, creator of GoToSolona for the Mac; but in the words of Karen Carpenter, “we’ve Only Just Begun.”

Michael Lauf

 

SeroTalk Podcast 35 – Lots of News, 5 Things for the iPhone, and 3 Radios Under $100

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

In Podcast 36, Michael Lauf and Ricky Enger discussed among other things:

Serotek Now Offers Paypal for All Software and Services

20,000 Downloads of iBlink Radio Since Being Posted on the Apps Page of the iTunes Store

HR4533 technology Bill of Rights for the Blind

Blind Persons Return to Work Act of 2010

APH 2GB Flash Cartridge for NLS players for $11.99, Cable Not Included

Blind Bargains ATIA 2010 coverage and other audio

Tech Chat 50 Show Notes for online Data Backup Solutions

Fideliphone allows stereo phone calls with the highest audio quality

Olympus to release recorder with text to speech, Voice Recognition, DAISY Playback, MicroSD, Wave, MP3 and WMA recording

RockBox 3.5

New Windows 7 antipiracy update to phone home regularly

Fans With Visual Impairments Gain Enhanced Access to MLB.COM and some team web sites

Bill Sparks and doug Hunsinger reviewed three radios. Get the links from the

All Things Radio Web Site.

Mike Calvo reviewed the

Jawbone Icon Bluetooth headset for the iPhone and other devices.

Michael Lauf reviewed three apps for the iPhone:

Just do a search in iTunes for

Mobile Talk

TVU Player

and

RSS Player

And Mike Calvo finished the podcast by reviewing the

Live Speakr dock for the iPhone that can fit in your pocket.

Listen to SeroTalk Podcast 35 – Lots of News, 5 Things for the iPhone, and 3 Radios Under $100

 

 

Tech Chat 50 – Online Backup solutions, and Unattended Windows Installations

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010

In Tech chat 50, we spoke live with users of AmazonS3 JungleDis, Carbonite, Mozy, MobileMe and Drop Box. We showed how to back up software, music documents and other important files, before they are lost to some unexpected event, which will definitely happen if you do not take precautions in advance.

We also showed how to make an unattended installDisk to automatically install Microsoft Windows XP, without user intervention or sighted assistance. We covered how to insert all Windows updates, add the latest software like Internet Explorer 8, Firefox 3.6, CCleaner, Adobe Acrobat Reader 9.3, Windows Media Player 11, FileZilla FTP, and more. And we discussed how to include drivers for sound, video and networking.

View Tech Chat 50 on Off-Sight Backup Solutions and Installing Windows XP Without Sighted Assistance Via Accessible Event.

Listen to MP3 of Tech Chat 50 on Off-Sight Backup Solutions and Installing Windows XP Without Sighted Assistance – 36 Minutes.

View show Notes for Tech Chat 50 – Off-Sight Backup Solutions and Installing Windows XP Without Sighted Assistance.

 

SeroTalk Podcast 34 – Blio Reader, Booksense, Oratio for Blackberry, Mobilespeak 4, and Talks 4.5

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010

In Podcast 34, we begin by hearing the first public demo of the

Blio Reader for the PC and iPhone to Offer One Million Text and Audio Books.

Michael lauf and Ricky enger discuss highlights from

ATIA 2010,

including Serotek’s latest product they call

AE Hotspot.

We spoke with GW Micro about the announcement that owners of the

Booksense can now download and listen to SAMNet content.

We spoke with Michel Pepin from Humanware about the release of

Oratio Screen Reader for blackberry PDA Devices.

And we finished with two interviews from ATIA:

Mobilespeak 4 from codeFactory providing access to touch screens on Windows Mobile and Symbian phones

and Nuance Talks 4.5 for Symbian Series 60 phones.

Listen to SeroTalk Podcast 34 – Blio Reader, Booksense Supports SAMNet content, Oratio for the Blackberry, Mobilespeak 4, and Talks 4.5

 

28 Interviews from ATIA 2010

Monday, February 1st, 2010

SeroTalk was able to get 28 interviews on January 27 and 28 at

ATIA 2010

held in Orlando Florida

Adaptive Switch labs

American Foundation for the Blind (AFB) Programs and Services

Fitness Products from A P H

Assist Touch System for A L S and ChatterVox Voice Amplifier

Demo of BookPort Plus from APH Coming in March 2010

GW Micro Announces Support for SAMNet Content in the Next BookSense Release

Click and Go Maps from In Touch Graphics Offer directions Via TTS or Telephone

EnableMart Products

EVAS (MIS) – Reader and Multi-Purpose Information system

Great Talking Box Company

HandyTech North America iRead OCR and Easy Braille Displays

Latest from Humanware as of January 28, 2010

Independent Living Aids – Kapten GPS, PenFriend Labeler, Large Display Cell Phone, Fully Talking Cordless Phone and Franklin Money Identifier

Inclusive TLC – Alternative Input Devices

Judy Lynn software – 18 Cause and Affect Applications

KNFB Reader latest Version

LevelStar Icon Update, October 2009

MacSpeech 1.58 Personal, MacSpeech Medical and MacSpeech Legal

CodeFactory Newly-Released MobileSpeak 4.0 for Windows Mobile and Symbian Phones

News-2-You Newspapers with Images Helping children Learn to Read

Two New Magnifiers from Optelec

Perkins Products – NLS Cartridges, New Braillers and Seka Braille Displays

RFBD Latest Supported Devices

Soft Touch – Software for Special Needs Children and Adults

Talks 4.5 Will Give Access to Touch Screens on Nokia Symbian Phones

TextHelp Fluency Tutor

Vizzle – 2,000 Plus Lessons with Visuals That Sizzle

ZoomText 10.0 Rewritten Will Run from USB Device in Summer 2010

 

Serotek Debuts Accessible Event Hotspot at ATIA 2010

Friday, January 29th, 2010

Serotek today unveiled its newest product, the AE HotSpot, at the 2010 ATIA conference in Orlando, FL. This revolutionary appliance, based on the same technology as Serotek’s Web-based Accessible Event service, gives people with disabilities access to classroom presentations, seminars, and other events. For the first time, people who have hearing or visual impairments can take full advantage of all aspects of any online or on-site event/presentation.

By leveraging our Accessible Event platform and secure wireless networking technology, Serotek’s AE HotSpot appliance allows event participants with disabilities to access slides, Excel spreadsheets, Web pages, and Word documents using their own wireless-enabled computers and access technology in real time. With the AE HotSpot, an event can be accessed from the Internet if the event coordinator wishes, but an Internet connection is not necessary for on-site participants to have full access to the event. That’s because the AE HotSpot appliance is a completely independent WiFi access point. This allows the event coordinator and/or presenter to decide what content will and will not be available to the attendees. The self-contained nature of this appliance enables a closed, secure Intranet environment, regardless of whether Internet connectivity is available. However, where Internet connectivity is available, the event coordinator can configure the AE HotSpot appliance to provide wireless Internet access as well as access to the event. The AE HotSpot can also record all event content and publish it on a web site or intranet with no need to install additional software on the target server. This enables anyone to deploy an accessible recording of an event, even if they don’t subscribe to the Web-based Accessible Event service.

Serotek will release the AE HotSpot soon. Learn more about the AE HotSpot by watching this accessible presentation.

First Three of Many Great Interviews from ATIA 2010

Friday, January 29th, 2010

27 Minute Detailed Review with Audio from the BookPort Plus

GW Micro Announces Support for SAMNet Content in Next BookSense Release

new MobileSpeak 4.0 for Windows Mobile and Symbian Phones

 

Serotek at ATIA 2010

Tuesday, January 26th, 2010

Serotek Corporation cordially invites you to drop by booth 520 at the 2010 ATIA conference at the Caribe Royale in Orlando, January 28 – 30.  Come and see hands-on demonstrations of all the latest Serotek technology, including a new surprise or two.

 

If you’re wondering which sessions to attend at this year’s conference, Serotek’s CEO, Mike Calvo, is conducting a presentation that you won’t want to miss.  “The Art of Being a Change Agent” will be presented on January 28 in the Curacao room ¾, from 1:30 to 2:30. 

 

When you’re not attending sessions, drop by our booth and learn how you can have access to powerful and portable assistive technology without breaking the bank.  Serotek is the first company offering you the ability to purchase screen reading technology on an as-needed basis through our “Build A Bundle” service.   Starting at just $9.95 per month, you can now have access to one license of the System Access screen reader, with additional machine licenses for only $5 per month.  Try out the System Access Mobile Network, known as SAMNet, with over 2,100 described movies, thousands of radio stations, recipes, TV shows, the Socializer for instant messaging and social networking, voice chat to meet other interesting people, web-based email, and so much more for just $9.95 per month.  For an additional $5, you can provide remote support and training to other Serotek customers, and even access your own computers remotely from anywhere!

 

When you’d like to carry your SAMNet content with you, you can do so by transferring it to your favorite portable device.  SAMNet supports a wide variety of audio players, allowing members to sync a wealth of content from the network including movies, email, and now, books from the National Library Service BARD program. IN addition to the Victor Reader Stream from Humanware, the Icon from Levelstar, and Braile Plus from the American Printinghouse for the Blind, SAMNet content is supported on the Plextalk Pocket. Serotek is also proud to announce that we will very soon be supporting the BookSense player from GW Micro and we’ll be demoing this upcoming support in our booth.  If you don’t yet have one of these sleek and powerful players, drop by the GW Micro booth #413 and pick one up, or visit www.gwmicro.com for more information.

 

Ask about Serotek’s free Keys for K-12 program, offering free portable screen reading technology for all grade school, middle school and high school students, ensuring that truly, no student gets left behind.

 

Serotek’s Accessible Event offers true Section 508 compliance to corporate meetings, webinars, classroom lectures and government projects.  You won’t want to miss getting a look at the very latest exciting innovation from Serotek and Accessible Event, so be sure to drop by our booth and see the technology that organizations and corporations like The Federal Communications Commission and Humanware are using to make meetings accessible to their entire staff.

 

If you’re not able to make it to Orlando this year, you can still keep up with the latest happenings at ATIA by putting

http://serotalk.com/feed in to your favorite RSS reader or podcatcher,

or simply by visiting http://www.serotalk.com, where we’ll be bringing you news and interviews from the show floor

 

The Serotek Team