NFB Honored at Technology Showcase
NFB Honored at Technology Showcase
NFB Honored at Technology Showcase
From the Editor: The following article appeared
in the December 10, 1998, edition of the Baltimore Sun.
Computers for Blind Open Eyes at Cyberfair
by Mark Ribbing Subtitle: A highlight of the
opening of the state's Technology Showcase was the exhibit of the computer software and
devices for the blind.
The hottest trends in high-technology are on
display at the Maryland Technology Showcase, which began its two-day run yesterday at the
Baltimore Convention Center. Children line up three deep to try Apple's new computer; TV
monitors show off crisp digital pictures; booth after booth heralds a better, faster way
of connecting to the Internet.
Gaining access to such wonders, of course,
requires a certain amount of technical know-how and money, but it often demands something
even more basic: sight.
For the blind and visually impaired the digital
age poses new difficulties as well as new opportunities, and society's ever-increasing
reliance on video and graphics for information is not an entirely welcome trend.
"The world is becoming seemingly more and
more visual," said Tom Ley, a product manager at Blazie Engineering in Forest Hill,
who develops computer technologies for the blind. "More things are based on sight
rather than on touch in a lot of ways. A lot of things are given to you in pictures rather
than in words nowadays.
"We as blind people have been striving for
years to incorporate ourselves into society. It's crucial for us to have access to new
technology."
Toward that end, the National Federation of the
Blind became the featured nonprofit of the Technology Showcase. The Baltimore
organization, founded in 1940, is trying to make high technology more accessible to the
sightless.
Ley manages a line of portable computers that the
visually impaired can use as a personal organizer, clock, word processor, and phone
directory.
The computer, called "Braille 'n
Speak," has a seven-button Braille keyboard that is used to record words and data. To
read what is on the machine, the user listens to the device's computerized voice. Much
like a Palm Pilot or other hand-held electronic organizer, Braille 'n Speak can transfer
its information to a regular personal computer.
The Federation seeks to encourage computer
makers, software companies, and World Wide Web site developers to consider the needs of
the blind and visually impaired as they develop new products, a campaign that the
organization says has met with mixed success.
Curtis Chong, the Federation's director of
technology, said the difficulty in persuading companies to take the needs of the blind
into account stems largely from a lack of understanding. "It's hard to understand a
blind person's having trouble using your Web site when you can't even imagine a blind
person's getting out of his house to go to work," he said.
Blind and visually impaired people can gather
information from a personal computer in one of two main ways. The more common method uses
software that enables the computer to generate a voice that reads onscreen text. One
example of this software is JAWS, which allows the sightless to use the Windows operating
system.
Spoken-word systems can be pricey. Chong said
JAWS and similar programs can easily add $800 or more to the cost of a computer.
However, this is less expensive than the other
method for making computer screens legible to the blind, known as "paperless
Braille." This system, also known as "refreshable Braille," is a line of
small bumps at the bottom of a computer keyboard.
As the computer scans a line of text, it commands
some of the bumps to rise and others to sink, creating a line of Braille that conveys the
text to the reader.
After reading a line, a person presses a button,
telling the computer to set up the next line of Braille. Blazie Engineering offers Braille
Lite, a version of Braille 'n Speak that uses paperless Braille.
Betsy A. Zaborowski, the Federation's director of
special programs, said these methods have made it easier for the blind to use computers
and check out Web sites, but obstacles remain. "We have made a lot of progress in
that we have pretty good access to text-based systems, but systems that have more graphics
present tremendous challenges to us."
That was the article that appeared in the
Baltimore Sun. A plaque was presented to the NFB at an afternoon reception during the
Technology Fair. Here is the text:
Maryland Technology Showcase
December 9-10, 1998
with sincere appreciation to
National Federation of the Blind
in recognition of your
outstanding contribution to
Maryland Technology Showcase
Parris N. Glendening
Governor
Kathleen Kennedy Townsend
Lt. Governor
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