I thought that was like the Kindle and wouldn't allow access via tts for drm 
titles.
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: erik burggraaf 
  To: Robert 
  Cc: [email protected] 
  Sent: Sunday, August 28, 2011 8:35 AM
  Subject: Re: Off topic - e-book readers or software usable built in or 
external compability with Window-Eyes?


  You can get you an IPod touch and download IBooks.  That's what I have.  I 
think the IBooks store is up to 300000 titles or so by now.


  Best,


  Erik Burggraaf
  This month in Ebony Promos: Two new gps systems for demo. Mac OS Lion When 
will it be supported?  Ebony Consulting at accessibility Unconference Toronto. 
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  On 2011-08-28, at 2:25 AM, Robert wrote:


    Well, none of the major players like Calibre or ADE will work well with 
screen readers. You can, however, assuming that your e-books do not have drm, 
convert them to more readable formats. Converting books with drm goes beyond 
the scope of this list, however. Calibre has an ebook-convert feature you can 
use in the command line. Formats like pdf do not convert well, however, 
especially for books like math books and things. Pdf was not really meant to be 
converted and the formatting usually comes out extremely messy.
    ----- Original Message ----- From: "Peter Wolfe" <[email protected]>
    To: "gw-info" <[email protected]>
    Sent: Sunday, August 28, 2011 12:59 AM
    Subject: Off topic - e-book readers or software usable built in or external 
compability with Window-Eyes?



      To all,





        Does anybody know of any accessible e-book readers on the market?

      I'd prefer software like with the the E-pub accessible features or

      anything workabel with Window-Eyes. I've looked online just have been

      told on the list that the imperfect Amazon Kindle is good just that

      nobody rechecks for typos, etc though. I already know of the

      traditionals like NLS e-book, Bookshare.org, RFB and D, Audiable.com,

      Project Gutenburg, University of Pennsylvania, Library of Congress,

      etc. I thought about Barnes and Noble E-Nook but the department didn't

      hear about a built in screen reader for us in mind but they past it

      along anyways.



      thanks,

      Peter

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