besides the library where else can I get the nls player?
the victor reader is a bit out of my budjet currently.
thanks
Hank
----- Original Message ----- From: "Greg Kearney" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "General discussions on all topics relating to the use of Mac OS X by theblind" <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, September 25, 2007 11:38 PM
Subject: Re: OT: DAISY players for Windows?


The NLS is not permitting software playback at this time. Only hardware players, and right now that is limited to the Victor Reader Stream and the NLS player can render NLS books. This is due to the encryption used both on the audio and DAISY files.


Greg Kearney
535 S. Jackson St.
Casper, Wyoming 82601
307-224-4022
[EMAIL PROTECTED]



On Sep 26, 2007, at 12:34 AM, hank smith wrote:

what about the nls format? can this be played on any software play windows or mac or just the victor stream currently?
----- Original Message ----- From: "Greg Kearney" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "General discussions on all topics relating to the use of Mac OS X by theblind" <[email protected]>; "Ricky Buchanan" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
Cc: "Iain Murray" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, September 25, 2007 11:30 PM
Subject: Re: OT: DAISY players for Windows?


There are a whole bunch of DAISY playback software for Windows.

AMIS is free and not bad it is at: http://amis.sourceforge.net/

VictorReader Soft a commercial player is good: http://www.humanware.com/en-usa/products/digital_talking_books/software/_details/id_62/victor_reader_soft.html

Humanware make a Mac version of VictorReader Soft that is sold through RFB&D only. It is very limited, only plays DAISY 2.02 books and quite expensive.

GHplayer which I consider one of the better commercial players can be found at: http://www.ghbraille.com/ghplayer.html

TAB Player from the Thai Association for the Blind can be found at http://www.daisynow.net/tabplayer/english/index.html

The Curtain Player, the Macintosh player I am working on with the students from Curtain University in Perth will be open source and free.

Because you are in Australia and the books you would be using will likely originate with Vision Australia you should be able to use any of the free players such as AMIS for this. Vision Australia is not using any encryption on their books to my understanding.

This means that you could use standard MP3 enabled CD players or other MP3 devices for playback as the books from Vision Australia, RNIB, CNIB and books produced with my DTBmaker program all retain the audio files in playback order. A MP3 enable CD player will not have the navigation, bookmarking and so on but its cost should be well under A$ 50.

Greg Kearney
535 S. Jackson St.
Casper, Wyoming 82601
307-224-4022
[EMAIL PROTECTED]



On Sep 25, 2007, at 10:02 PM, Ricky Buchanan wrote:

Sorry for the off-topic post, I don't know anywhere else to find a bunch of people who will know this! I am some official thing and need details of what the most commonly used software DAISY players are in Windows. Is there one that virtually everybody uses, or is it spread between a lot of them? Bonus brownie points if you know the website for the programs, but I can Google them if not.

Also, this DAISY player that Greg Kearney and company are working on, is it going to be free or commercial when it's done? If the latter, does anybody know the costs?

The paper I'm writing is about how the library should loan software players to members who would prefer them to the hardware players they already offer for loan. I thought putting actual examples and costs would point out that buying licenses for DAISY player software is probably a lot cheaper than the AU$300 hardware players they are lending!

r
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