Its not, but never the less, very good to know.
----- Original Message ----- From: "Kevin Chao" <[email protected]> To: "'Paul Tandy'" <[email protected]>; <[email protected]>; <[email protected]>; <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, February 18, 2009 12:52 PM
Subject: RE: [Braillenote] fw: blind_html [Fwd: Fred's Head Companion -American Printing House for the Blind]


I am sorry but in what way is this related to the BrailleNote?

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:braillenote-
[email protected]] On Behalf Of Paul Tandy
Sent: Wednesday, February 18, 2009 11:39 AM
To: [email protected]; [email protected];
[email protected]
Subject: [Braillenote] fw: blind_html [Fwd: Fred's Head Companion -
American Printing House for the Blind]

Hi, this is pretty cool.

I, personally don't plan to work with saws and stuff when I grow
up, but if I do it will be interesting.

Paul

 ---- Original Message ------
From: Nimer <[email protected]
Subject: blind_html [Fwd: Fred's Head Companion - American
Printing House for the Blind]
Date sent: Tue, 17 Feb 2009 09:27:07 -0700



-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Fred's Head Companion - American Printing House for the
Blind
Date: Tue, 17 Feb 2009 08:54:23 -0600 (CST)
From: Fred's Head Companion <[email protected]
Reply-To: Fred's Head Companion <[email protected]
To: [email protected]



  Fred's Head Companion - American Printing House for the Blind
  <http://www.fredshead.info/

Link to Fred's Head Companion <http://www.fredshead.info/

The Saw That Automatically Retracts When Sensing Skin
<http://feeds.feedburner.com/%7Er/FredsHeadCompanion/%7E3/5417476
53/saw-that-automatically-retracts-when.html


Posted: 17 Feb 2009 08:40 AM CST

if you value your fingers, especially your thumbs and you are a
blind or
visually impaired carpenter and/or use table saws, then you'll
want to
check out the SawStop table saw.

This "handy" device senses the presence of skin by using the fact
that
the human body can absorb electrical charge.  The SawStop is
designed to
stop within 5 milliseconds of sensing that change, and will cause
at
most a very superficial nick.  It's not cheap, but it's a cool
idea that
more companies should incorperate into similar products, bringing
the
price down.  But until we can regrow limbs, it's probably worth
every penny.

Click this link to learn more about the Contractor Saw Featuring
SawStop
technology
<http://sawstop.com/contractor/contractor_features.php>.

Lowering Screen Resolution Makes Vista Easier to See
<http://feeds.feedburner.com/%7Er/FredsHeadCompanion/%7E3/5417101
25/lowering-screen-resolution-makes-vista.html


Posted: 17 Feb 2009 07:41 AM CST

Every now and then we have a tip just for the visually impaired
readers
of Fred's Head.  This is one such tip.

Today's computer monitors with wide screens will in most cases
shrink
icons and websites to minimal size for better resolution,
sometimes
making everything very hard to see and read, especially for the
sight
impaired.

The easiest way to make everything a little bigger is by lowering
the
monitors screen resolution just a bit.  These instructions are
for the
Windows Vista operating system.

   1.  Right click on any empty area of your desktop (the first
screen
      you see once the computer is turned on and booted).
   2.  This will bring up a menu with several options, select the
last
      one which is personalize, this will bring up a larger menu.
   3.  Choose "Display Settings" where you will then find a
slider bar
      with xxxx by xxx pixels.
   4.  Hold the slider button with your mouse button pressed and
slide it
      towards the left once.
   5.  Select apply at the bottom left of the window, this will
then make
      everything a little bigger.  You may repeat as needed until
you
      become comfortable with the screen resolution.

Tip: A good monitor resolution is when most websites fill your
screen
without having to scroll horizontally.

   1.  Right click anywhere on your desktop.
   2.  Select personalize.
   3.  Hold the slider button with your mouse button pressed and
slide it
      towards the left.

Helen Keller Stars as Helen Killer
<http://feeds.feedburner.com/%7Er/FredsHeadCompanion/%7E3/5412024
14/helen-keller-stars-as-helen-killer.html


Posted: 16 Feb 2009 02:35 PM CST

Helen Keller dedicated her adult life to expanding possibilities
for
people living with disabilities throughout the world.  Now she
stars in
her very own comic book.

At the dawn of the 20th Century, twenty-one year old college
student
Helen Keller has a dark secret.  Science has restored her lost
senses and
granted her unimaginable power.  Will she use it to protect
herself and
her country.  or will it destroy them both?

Thoroughly researched, Helen Killer blends a full cast of
historical
characters with high octane super-spy action, examining the
extraordinary spirit of one of the most inspiring individuals of
the
twentieth century.  Written by Andrew Kreisberg who has written
for such
tv hits as "The Simpsons," "Boston Legal" and "Eli Stone." This
is the
first fully illustratedbook by Matt Rice, a talented up and comer
of
whom big things are expected.


        The First Four Issues are Now Available


          Issue #1

1901: Helen Keller, with the aid of a fantastic device, invented
by her
friend and mentor, Alexander Graham Bell, regains her sight and
hearing
as well as near super-human strength and agility.  Helen is
enlisted by
the Secret Service to protect President William McKinley who has
been
targeted for assassination by Anarchists.  As a deeper conspiracy
to
destroy America unfolds around her, Helen discovers that her new
abilities come with a dark and terrifying price.


          Issue #2

Secret Service agent Helen Keller, with the aid of a device which
has
restored her lost senses, and her partner Jonah Blaylock have
traveled
to the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo to protect President
McKinley
from Anarchists.  As Helen learns to master her new powers, the
assassin
is moving into position.


          Issue #3

At the dawn of the 20th Century, twenty-one year old college
student
Helen Keller has a dark secret.  Science has restored her lost
senses and
granted her unimaginable power.  Will she use it to protect
herself and
her country...  or will it destroy them both? Thoroughly
researched,
Helen Killer blends a full cast of historical characters with
high
octane super-spy action, examining the extraordinary spirit of
one of
the most inspiring individuals of the twentieth century.


          Issue #4

With the Omnicle now in the hands of Elisha Grey, a powerless
Helen
Keller races to New York City to stop him and his fellow
Anarchists from
destroying America's wealth.  But to defeat Grey, Helen must
embrace her
dark self.  To save the country, will she have to sacrifice her
soul?

/WARNING! This comic contains adult themes and may not be
appropriate
for all audiences/.

Click this link to visit the Helen Killer website to learn more
about
this exciting comic book series: http://www.helenkillercomic.com
<http://www.helenkillercomic.com>.

Complete Streets
<http://feeds.feedburner.com/%7Er/FredsHeadCompanion/%7E3/5411733
27/complete-streets.html


Posted: 16 Feb 2009 01:49 PM CST

Complete streets are designed and operated to enable safe access
for all
users.  Pedestrians, bicyclists, motorists and transit riders of
all ages
and abilities must be able to safely move along and across a
complete
street.

Creating complete streets means transportation agencies must
change
their orientation toward building primarily for cars.
Instituting a
complete streets policy ensures that transportation agencies
routinely
design and operate the entire right of way to enable safe access
for all
users.  Places with complete streets policies are making sure
that their
streets and roads work for drivers, transit users, pedestrians,
and
bicyclists, as well as for older people, children, and people
with
disabilities.

Since each complete street is unique, it is impossible to give a
single
description of what one might look like.  But ingredients that
may be
found on a complete street include sidewalks, bike lanes (or wide
paved
shoulders), special bus lanes, comfortable and accessible transit
stops,
frequent crossing opportunities, median islands, accessible
pedestrian
signals, curb extensions, and more.  A complete street in a rural
area
will look quite different from a complete street in a highly
urban area.
But both are designed to balance safety and convenience for
everyone
using the road.

Many streets where people bicycle or walk are incomplete.  Our
states,
cities, counties and towns have built many miles of streets and
roads
that are safe and comfortable only for travel by motor vehicle.
These
roadways often lack sidewalks or crosswalks, have lanes too
narrow to
share with bicyclists, and make no room for transit riders and no
accommodation for people with disabilities.  A recent federal
survey
found that about one-quarter of walking trips take place on roads
without sidewalks or shoulders, and bike lanes are available for
only
about 5 percent of bicycle trips .  Another national survey of
pedestrians and bicyclists found that the top complaints were the
lack
of sidewalks and bikeways - essentially, incomplete streets.

Few laws require states to build roads as complete transportation
corridors.  In 2000, the US Department of Transportation advised
states
receiving federal funds that "bicycling and walking facilities
will be
incorporated into all transportation projects unless exceptional
circumstances exist." But by their own admission, fewer than half
the
states follow this federal guidance.  Many highway improvements
add
automobile capacity and increase vehicle speeds, but do nothing
to
mitigate the negative impact this usually has on bicycling and
walking.

Streets without safe places to walk and bicycle put people at
risk.
While nine percent of all trips are made by foot or bicycle, more
than
13 percent of all traffic fatalities are bicyclists or
pedestrians .
More than 5,000 pedestrians and bicyclists die each year on US
roads.
The most dangerous places to walk and bicycle are sprawling
communities
with streets built for driving only.

Roads without safe access for non-drivers become barriers.  About
one-third of Americans do not drive , so complete streets are
essential
for children and older Americans, as well as people who use
wheelchairs,
have vision impairments, or simply cannot afford a car.

Click this link to learn more about Complete Streets and how you
can
help create them: http://www.completestreets.org
<http://www.completestreets.org>.

US Home Loans for People with Disabilities and Seniors
<http://feeds.feedburner.com/%7Er/FredsHeadCompanion/%7E3/3816237
06/us-home-loans-for-people-with.html


Posted: 16 Feb 2009 01:36 PM CST

For people who have a disability and those with low income,
finding a
home loan can be a daunting task.  Owning your own home is
considered a
fundamental right by most people, a natural progression into the
world
of independent living.

One in three Americans living with disabilities lives below or at
the
poverty level.  That makes millions of people with disabilities
living
under socially and financially acceptable conditions.

Disabled World <http://www.disabled-world.com> is trying to make
finding
a reputable home loan lender a little easier by listing both
government
public and private institutions that lend money for home
purchases and
down payment loans to people with disabilities and very low
income
earners.  They have created a list of national, state, and local
programs
that offer mortgage assistance and other types of housing aid to
help
better serve those with disabilities.  There are a number of
organizations listed that can provide guidance and information
about
buying a home.  Click this link to visit Disabled World's >/First
home
owners guide to mortgages/ page
<http://www.disabled-world.com/loans/ushomeloans.shtml>.


        DisabilityHelpSite.com Helps People Find Needed Benefits

 From the site:

"The disABLED have many needs which challenge their lives.
People with
disabilities face financial needs, mobility issues, lack of
quality
housing, as well as struggling with prescription medicine costs.
There
is help available.  Government disability benefits, assistive
technology
devices, and special housing funds are all benefits which are
available
to the disABLED.  I'll help you find those benefits."

Click this link to visit http://www.disabilityhelpsite.com
<http://www.disabilityhelpsite.com>.

Women: at greater risk of blindness
<http://feeds.feedburner.com/%7Er/FredsHeadCompanion/%7E3/5411620
22/women-at-greater-risk-of-blindness.html


Posted: 16 Feb 2009 01:26 PM CST

Two thirds of all people who are blind or visually impaired are
women,
according to the Women's Eye Health Task Force
<http://www.womenseyehealth.org/index.php>.  Age, nutrition,
hormone-related issues and access to information and treatment
are all
factors that put women at greater risk for vision impairment.
However,
the Internet can help people learn about steps to help better
protect
vision.  At the Web site of Lion's Eye Heath Program -- Lehp.org
<http://www.Lehp.org> -- women can learn how to spot the risk
factors
for eye diseases, get free eye health educational materials and
find
medical eye care, including where to get free medical care in any
community.

In 2001, a major epidemiological survey was conducted, which
revealed
that women bear a greater burden of blindness and vision loss.
Of the
common eye diseases, dry eye syndrome, autoimmune diseases, and
certain
forms of cataract are intrinsically more prevalent in women than
in men.
In industrialized countries, age-related afflictions such as
macular
degeneration and cataract affect women more often than men
because women
tend to live longer.  In developing countries, infectious
diseases such
as trachoma are more prevalent in women, and, in some areas of
the
world, women have less access to medical care.

It has been estimated that three quarters of blindness and vision
loss
is either preventable or treatable.  You can optimize your eye
health by
practicing a healthy lifestyle, having regular eye exams, and
protecting
your eyes from injury.  For more information on blindness, and
how it
effects women, visit the site of the Lion's Eye Heath Program by
clicking this link: http://www.Lehp.org <http://www.Lehp.org>.
You may
also wish to visit the Women's Eye Health Task Force by clicking
this
link: http://www.womenseyehealth.org/index.php
<http://www.womenseyehealth.org/index.php>.


        Women's International Linkage on Disability

D-WILD (Women's International Linkage on Disability) is an
international
e-mail list group for WOMEN with disabilities and WOMEN allies.
Women
from different countries exchange experiences, information and
ideas on
issues related to women with disabilities.

When you post to this list, you are reaching disabled women from
around
the world.  D-WILD is co-managed by two volunteers, Barbara
Anello, a WWD
from North Bay, Ontario in Canada and by Rebecca, a young WWD
from
Madison, Wisconsin in the USA.  "While some members wouldn't mind
male
members on our group some other members have been abused by men
or just
don't feel comfortable discussing some issues openly with male
members
around.  We just want to have a little place where all women can
feel
safe to share ideas and feelings.  So, you must be female to join
but you
don't need to be disabled to join.  A disability can be physical
or mental."

Click this link to learn more about the Women's International
Linkage on
Disability by visiting this website:
http://www.geocities.com/dwildgroup
<http://www.geocities.com/dwildgroup>.

You are subscribed to email updates from Fred's Head Companion
<http://www.fredshead.info/
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Thanks

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