Deccan Herald, India
Friday, December 29, 2006

Portal to help blind surf for jobs created

By Kalyan Ray, DH News Service

New Delhi: Thanks to the country's first job portal to be developed exclusively 
for the visually challenged, the blind community in India too can surf the
Internet to search for jobs.

The yet-to-be-named portal whose beta version is doing the rounds is likely to 
be launched by the second week of February, Sriram Bharatam, the chief executive
officer of Hyderabad-based Iridium Interactive, which is designing the website 
with the help of NASSCOM Foundation, told Deccan Herald.

Developed using indigenous tools, the upcoming website is being considered a 
key achievement in aiding the visually challenged community to organise their
lives with the power of the net.

"At the NASSCOM Foundation, we are looking at different ways to bring the 
disabled people including the blind community into the mainstream. Giving them
an option to search for jobs is one," the foundation's CEO Rufina Fernandez 
said.

Other NASSCOM members are developing an inexpensive "screen reader" for the 
blind and developing technologies for them to operate automated teller machines
(ATMs) without assistance. An inexpensive screen reader will reduce the burden 
on the employer to recruit the visually impaired as the licensing fee for
existing readers are huge.

"The new job portal is an welcome step as almost one fourth of the world's 
total blind population lives in India," said Shanthi Ranganathan who heads 
Enable
India, an NGO in Bangalore for the disabled community.

"Also if big business houses make their websites disabled-friendly, they will 
get additional customers," she said, adding that some of the foreign business
houses have gained financially just by doing that.

The UK-based supermarket chain Tescos has increased their sales just by making 
their website disabled-friendly as they too can navigate through the websites
and place orders, claimed Mr Bharatam.

However, despite having legal protection in USA, UK, Canada, Australia and New 
Zealand, most of the websites in these countries are not disabled-friendly.
According to a survey carried out by an website standards magazine, among the 
official websites of Australia, Canada UK, USA and India, the Indian portal
www.india.gov.in
fared the worst.

Earlier this month, US officials had shared their experiences and offered 
assistance to Indian officials in a meeting in Bangalore.

Iridium too is planning to recruit about 25 visually impaired people in three 
of its testing centres in Noida, Mumbai and Hyderabad. "We have already 
recruited
eight and are planning to recruit more in these centres in the next three 
months so that all of them are up and ready by March 2007.

They will test all our disable-friendly products before launching," said Mr 
Bharatam.

OTHER PLANS

*A screen reader to help the blind operate ATMs

*Inexpensive screen readers for employers

*Making business websites disabled-friendly

*Recruiting more visually impaired

http://www.deccanherald.com/deccanherald/dec292006/state23314620061228.asp

--
E. G. Ravikumar
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