Most of the games that come with windows seven (maybe later?) are
almost entirely accessable already. I haven't tried the internet
based ones, but all of the offline games seem to be button based,
which means that they do get read off quite nicely.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Charles Rivard" <wee1s...@fidnet.com
To: "Gamers Discussion list" <gamers@audyssey.org
Date sent: Sat, 30 Mar 2013 10:11:14 -0500
Subject: Re: [Audyssey] Moderator message - Inquiry From Popular
Mechanics
I have requested that Freedom Scientific do some work on getting
the games
that come with Windows accessible. I have also contacted
Microsoft on this
so that they and FS might work together. I hate the attitude of
FS. They,
in no uncertain terms, let me know that jaws, after all, stands
for "Job!
access! with speech". I asked them how many of their customers
use their
computers at home? And how many of those computers already have
the Windows
games installed? And if they knew how many people play those
games? They
are not at all interested in the project. Between organizations
like this,
and rehab, I get furiously disgusted.
--
If guns kill people, writing implements cause grammatical and
spelling
errors!
----- Original Message -----
From: "Thomas Ward" <thomasward1...@gmail.com
To: "Gamers Discussion list" <gamers@audyssey.org
Sent: Saturday, March 30, 2013 6:09 AM
Subject: Re: [Audyssey] Moderator message - Inquiry From Popular
Mechanics
Hi Charles,
Well, we can certainly hope. As you say Popular Mechanics is
redistributed via NLS and perhaps more blind and visually
impaired
people will here about us. However, there is a bigger hope that
mainstream game developers will take notice of a growing
community of
blind people who are looking fore more and more accessible
games. If
nothing else I think people who know someone who is blind will
go
online and give them some games to play.
It amazes me how many blind people who are out there who have
computers and are still in the dark when it comes to computer
games. I
suppose part can be blamed on the rehab centers which buy them,
show
them Jaws, and don't mention there are games and things to do,
or even
worse tell them specifically that the system is to be used for
work
and not play.
Case in point. A few years ago I was contacted by a blind woman
in my
area who does medical transcription at the hospital. Well, she
has a
computer, and she was just looking for a few simple games like
Uno,
Solitare, Hearts, etc and didn't have any idea that the
Spoonbill and
Jim Kitchen games existed. I installed them on her home machine,
for
which she was greatful, but I didn't do anything the local BSVI
rehab
tech ould have done when he gave it to her to begin with. All
because
rehab tends to see computers simply as tools for work rather
than the
multipurpose device it is.
Anyway, my hope is that more people will hear about us and will
join
in the fun. They need more resources than rehab centers that
aren't
too interested in making their clients aware of games and other
things
to do besides running Word, Powerpoint, Outlook, and Jaws.
Cheers!
On 3/30/13, Charles Rivard <wee1s...@fidnet.com> wrote:
Right. I totally understand why she was on the list for a short
time
rather
than becoming a subscriber. One thought I do have, though, is
this:
Popular Mechanics is produced for the Library of Congress
Talking Book
program. I'm thinking that some blind readers might not know
that such
games exist, and they will check this out. Also, parents,
relatives and
friends of potential gamers might check into it for their blind
family
members or friends because of this article. We can always hope,
right?
--
If guns kill people, writing implements cause grammatical and
spelling
errors!
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