Sorry if this has already been dealt with, I've got a truly remarkable amount 
of messages from this very list, and am seriously behind, but here goes anyway. 
 Daisy is not a type of book.  Daisy is not a text file, it is not an audio 
book, and it is not a Braille book.  Daisy is a method of placing marks 
throughout a book, no matter what format that book is in.  These marks can 
include, but are not limited to, chapter headings, section headings, subsection 
headings, parts, (as in part one, part two, etc), and page numbers.  With 
Daisy, for instance, a student can open his/her textbooks and go immediately to 
the exact section, chapter, and page all the sighted students have flipped to 
in their print copies of the same book.  The student can use a Daisy text file, 
a Daisy talking book, or a Daisy book that includes both text and narrated 
audio.


Daisy can be useful in other ways, such as quickly jumping from section to 
section and article to article in a newspaper.

So, to clear up a couple of blatantly untrue statements:  Daisy is NOT 
synonymous with "talking book" or "audio book," so a deaf-blind person is 
perfectly capable of using Daisy.   Also, Daisy is NOT synonymous with 
"straight text" or "plain text".  The reason Daisy books are larger than the 
same book in plain text is because it incorporates all those useful place 
markers.

I hope this has helped to clear things up.

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