[Ham-Computers] Screen reading software
johngadd at comcast.net
johngadd at comcast.net
Wed Jun 1 13:47:05 EDT 2005
Duane You are a saint. Thank you for helping the blind. I work with mentally ill veterans. In the XP world I am using the Dragon 8 Naturally speaking "Preferred" version. Cost about $200 Trained EZ and I was up working in about an hour and Im slow. IBM product was very difficult. Hope this helps
-------------- Original message --------------
> When one uses a software synthesizer, that is, the internal sound card and
> software to create synthetic speech, as opposed to a hardware based internal
> card or external unit, you will encounter all sorts of conflicts. This is due to
> various TSR in the HMA fighting for the same memory location. Such as losing
> some, and sometimes all, sounds Windows generates for various boot up, shutdwon,
> error and so forth. Additionally, almost all .wav files will not play due to
> conflicts.
>
> The hardware synthesizer costs more, but eliminates 'ALL' of the memory
> conflicts because it has onboard all that it needs.
>
> I have been here since before we had Text To Speech, helped in its development,
> (I still have the original TTS code in Assembly language on a 5.25 inch 90K
> diskette!), and have written many programs, including a talking word processing
> program, numerous financial income/expense, music libraries, address/phone, mail
> list and label, etc. programs over the past twenty years. All of which I gave
> away, with two exceptions.
>
> All of which took on the average of 11K! The word processing program took 28K
> with 32K of data storage for the files.
>
> I still use the majority of these programs daily.
>
> I have worked from the most crude, monotone, robotic voice, such as the ECHO PC
> by Street Electronics to the DECTALK PC, the best of the lot. I prefer the DEC
> hardware, even though it is far from inexpensive. The speech capability is
> unlimited, the pronunciation accuracy is well over 96%, the flexibility is great
> and the quality of speech is actually enjoyable. Whichis very important when
> must listen to a computer talk for eight hours every day of the year!
>
> I got by with lesser hardware synthesizers, such as the G.W. Micro Sounding
> Board for $400, but it was very robotic and anything but pleasant to listen to.
> Their Windows reading program called Windows-Eyes sold for $595 the last I knew,
> and worked quite well. However, it was inferior to JFW in many areas. One thing
> I did not like, nor do I like, is that they did not allow their hardware
> synthesizer to use the power of any other companies software. Thus if you owned
> a DECTALK PC card or DEC Express external unit, you lost ALL the power of this
> equipment! A real negative for G.W. Micro, who did it intentionally to promote
> their Sounding Board product.
>
> The Artic Vision product was never very good. It worked, but was way too high
> priced for what it was, sounded awful. I can understand almost anyone's
> synthetic speech easily, as i am accustomed to hearing it for a quarter of a
> century! But I had problems with Artic as many letters were not distinguishable
> from another. Such as "B" and "G" and "D" and "V". There is a option to have a
> character spoken phonetically, but this was very awkward to use with Artic, not
> so for anyone else, however. Artic only survived because some people convinced
> state rehab agencies to supply it to blind students on loan. Nobody got to keep
> them! When the child got out of high school, the electronic aids were taken back
> and good luck!
>
> The DOS software I paid $495 for, is now free. The one thing I love about it is,
> total control for the user! It blows any, and all, Windows screen reading
> software away. However, the way in which alphabetic characters were created has
> changed from numeric values of ASCII to graphic characters that comprise a
> letter today. Windows is graphics based and it is only going to get worse for
> the blind. unfortunately.
>
> I spent many years helping the blind configure their computers, for free. I
> never charged them a cent, as I knew they did not have it to begin with. i put
> their systems together, programmed them, configured them and taught them how to
> use them. All on my own time and at my own expense.
>
> A number of companies asked me to represent them, i refused them all. Why?
> Because if I represented henter-Joyce Inc., now Freedom Scientific Inc., I had
> to sell 'only' their products. I refused to do that because each blidn person
> had different needs, levels of skill and so forth. I always tried to put
> together the system that would best serve his/her needs, with no thought as to
> who's products I used. I did not want, and refused to be, bound to any one
> manufacturer. That was about money, i was about helping my fellow blind
> compatriots.
>
> There are good products out there, but all of them cost money. A lot of it. The
> handicapped live at, generally below, the national poverty level. They can not
> afford these wonderful aids and/or appliances that would make their lives more
> productive, give them an image of self-worth from the independence gained, give
> them job skills and allow them to do the simple things that those who are not
> handicapped do and never give a moments thought to. But the states do not give
> this stuff away to the handicapped, nor does the federal government. it is
> almost always through service clubs such as a Lions Club, family, friends etc.
>
> A computer with speech for the blind person who has average abilities, as
> opposed to severe mental or other further disabling physical issues, is in my
> opinion, the best thing since Braill was first introduced. Windows may take this
> away from the blind, sadly. But after all, it is a sighted world and all of
> these products are about one thing, profit for the manufacturer I was foolish
> enough to think that when the cost of the technology came down, as it has
> drastically, that these products would be easier for the blind, and other
> handicapped persons, to obtain. i could not have been more wrong.
>
> Duane Fischer, w8DBF
>
>
>
>
>
>
> ----------
> From: Kim
> To: ham-computers at mailman.qth.net
> Subject: [Ham-Computers] Screen reading software
> Date: Wednesday, June 01, 2005 8:08 AM
>
> Aloha, I was sent some archived mail from this site. It is important to know
> that screen reading software for the blind is a very complicated program. One
> individual said it was $795, now it seems, it is $895 but you can use the built
> in speech synthesizer. The program does not work with all applications but new
> scripts are being developed for several popular applications. Microsoft has
> added the MSAA service which interacts with "JAWS" to offer information to the
> blind user. A demo can be downloaded from "HJ.com"/"downloads"/"JAWS screen
> reading software". I have missed some of the mailings and hope I am not
> imposing on anyone. Artic Vision also has a screenreader for DOS and they have
> a website as well.
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