It is a technological advance for which many are grateful: "For the
first time, when the results of the French book prizes were published
this year, they were already available for our members as
computer-generated audiobooks," says Luc Maumet, head of the media
library operated by the Association Valentin-Haüy (AVH), which helps
blind and visually impaired people.
http://www.theguardian.com/society/2013/dec/31/digital-audiobooks-visually-impaired-download-france
Thanks to new technology and systems such as Eole, a download service
AVH launched in April, the visually impaired and other people
prevented from reading by a physical or motor disability can also
access, almost in real time, new publications: fiction, non-fiction,
cookbooks and such. "When I started here about 10 years ago,
audiobooks were on cassettes and our members sometimes had to wait
years to borrow them," Maumet recalls, as we tour the ground-breaking
library at the AVH headquarters in the seventh arrondissement of
Paris.

The library is quite a surprise. Hundreds of CDs in white sleeves are
arranged on wood shelves, with just a few lines of text in black
print. Titles can be identified by their reference in braille on the
back cover. Farther on are several metres of A4 spiral notebooks, also
completely white. The contrast with the relatively dark floor helps
visually impaired staff find their way around. "The advantage with
books in braille is that access to the text is more immediate," Maumet
says. "The problem is all the space they take up. An average novel is
seven volumes long in braille. It takes two wheelie cases to carry The
Kindly Ones, by Jonathan Littell, which is 1,400 pages long." The
library is also equipped with special electronic devices: CD players
and memory sticks for Daisy-format audiobooks, suitable for the
visually impaired; PCs with braille terminals; video magnifiers that
will enlarge text from a standard document as large as required,
change the colours and adjust the contrast.

But most AVH subscribers do not actually visit the library. The staff
of 17, half of whom are visually impaired, handle most of the demand
by email, phone or post. An audiobook can be "burned" on a CD and
dispatched to mainland France free of charge.

In the past few years, new technology has brought about major changes
in the daily life of blind and severely visually impaired people - 1.2
million in France, 285 million worldwide. Services for downloading
audiobooks have appeared in many countries. There are also special
players for listening to books. PCs and smartphones now offer similar
functions. Braille terminals are available too, with scope for reading
and input.

A French law, passed in 2006, requires publishers to make their source
files available to certified organisations, enabling the latter to
transcribe books into sound or braille - on paper and digitally - and
to distribute them. This exception to the law of copyright, on the
grounds of accessibility, may soon become universal, a global treaty
having been signed in Marrakech in June 2013. At AVH hundreds of
volunteers take part in recording audiobooks, but increasingly this
process is being automated. In just a few hours a computer can use
synthetic speech to generate a whole audiobook.

Eole, one of the largest French-language digital libraries, already
has more than 6,000 audio titles. "In six months we have registered
over 1,600 users, downloading 30,000 files. The challenge now is to
make this service known to a larger audience," Maumet says, adding
that users need a certificate from an eye specialist or to be already
registered as more than 80% visually impaired. "We would like to offer
the service to people with other disabilities, such as dyslexia, as is
the case in Sweden, but it's not legal in France," he explains. "We
are catching up, but other challenges lie ahead. How, for instance,
can we translate a coffee-table book on luxury cars?"

Eole already has plenty of satisfied subscribers. Pascale Isel, for
instance, has downloaded books in all the available formats:
audiobooks recorded by real people, or software, or in digital
braille. "On public transport I prefer my little braille notebook. At
home I listen to audiobooks on my iPhone while I'm doing the
housework," she says. Born blind, she is quick to adopt new
technology.

"It's a fantastic service," says Caroline Dunoyer, an interpreter who
has been visually impaired since birth. She consumes large numbers of
audiobooks, but also checks the papers thanks to a subscription to a
voice press service, vocalepresse.com, which provides audio access to
more than 50 papers on the day of publication.

This story appeared in Guardian Weekly, which incorporates material
from Le Monde


-- 
Avinash Shahi
Doctoral student at Centre for Law and Governance JNU



Register at the dedicated AccessIndia list for discussing accessibility of 
mobile phones / Tabs on:
http://mail.accessindia.org.in/mailman/listinfo/mobile.accessindia_accessindia.org.in


Search for old postings at:
http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/

To unsubscribe send a message to
[email protected]
with the subject unsubscribe.

To change your subscription to digest mode or make any other changes, please 
visit the list home page at
http://accessindia.org.in/mailman/listinfo/accessindia_accessindia.org.in


Disclaimer:
1. Contents of the mails, factual, or otherwise, reflect the thinking of the 
person sending the mail and AI in no way relates itself to its veracity;

2. AI cannot be held liable for any commission/omission based on the mails sent 
through this mailing list..

Reply via email to