If you can include a link for:
the blog posts that compare JAWS and Window-eyes,
and a link to video in question I'll check it out.
thanks, Manny
checkout my stand-up comedy performance--please forward or post on your
social network--my goal is to reach a million clicks:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=75fbevlz10g
On 5/11/2012 12:39 PM, Josh Rivera wrote:
Katherine,
I also couldn't find the download page. To the fellow who wrote
previously, if you click on the articles link on her page, you will
find two software recommendations. As for the blog page, I couldn't
make heads or tails out of it, for it just went through numbers, and
didn't identify what was behind each link. Maybe that's the way
blogging works, so if I show my ignorance, it's because I'm not a blogger.
On Fri, 11 May 2012 21:05:24 +0000 Katherine Moss
<[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> writes:
Hello all,
To some this might be considered off topic, but to others, maybe
not. I'm sure that you have seen my web site that is listed in my
signature? If not, I'd recommend checking it out. But all that
aside, I'm really curious what the best way to get information
about accessibility or lack thereof as it pertains to both the
blind and the sighted that work with them, on the internet in a
way that people will actually listen? For instance, I have a
couple of blog posts that compare JAWS and Window-Eyes; what works
best in both, and where one excels over the other and such. I can
see that as a very popular topic, but no comments have been posted
to it thus far. Does that mean that I did a horrible job
conveying the information? And then, I posted a video in plain,
public, view on youtube demonstrating the poor quality that screen
readers exhibit with the more important enterprise-based software
using Team Foundation server 11 from Microsoft as an example. My
point on that video is that the enterprise sector needs to be made
accessible too or else blind people will be barred from tech jobs,
which can be horrible one, if they are passionate about it like I
am, or Two, if the facility at which they work's infrastructure
moves to the cloud where evidently screen readers either aren't
allowed, or GW Micro is really behind. That video was targeted
directly at the sighted population, yet it bears no comments?
Obviously I'm doing something wrong in the utmost in trying to
succeed at my mission, or this shows just how little people care.
Any suggestions on how I can drive the sighted population to this
kind of stuff so that they can understand us and what we deal with
every day when it comes to company discrimination on what software
to make accessible? And my hope for this discussion, though it
doesn't directly pertain to Window-Eyes, is that we can all come
up with some suggestions so that more accessibility information
targeted at the sighted learning about the blind will get out
there. Thanks for any feedback.
Katherine Moss,
Administrator of the AccessCop Network, previously Raeder24.org.
Visit us on the web at http://raeder24.org <http://raeder24.org/>
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