This would be a fantastic opportunity to increase systemic accessibility by 
making such an interface accessible once, and then allowing such benefits to 
cascade across any/all users.

As it seems that the content is rather structured in nature, and that the 
interface is reasonably straight forward, the technical complexity of such a 
task would not be too difficult.

I'm happy to discuss. You have a huge opportunity to move the needle here on 
opening up access to not only persons with disabilities but everyone who 
interacts with such collections via this new interface.

Take care,
Sina

President, Prime Access Consulting, Inc.
Twitter: @SinaBahram
Company Website: http://www.pac.bz
Personal Website: http://www.sinabahram.com
Blog: http://blog.sinabahram.com

-----Original Message-----
From: mcn-l-boun...@mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-boun...@mcn.edu] On Behalf Of Megan 
R. Brett
Sent: Thursday, May 12, 2016 11:36 AM
To: mcn-l@mcn.edu
Subject: [MCN-L] Beta of Omeka Everywhere Collections Viewer

Yesterday the beta of the Omeka Everywhere Collections Viewer was released. The 
software allows you to connect an existing Omeka Classic installation to a 
multi-touch table or tablet (running windows) for an in-gallery experience. So 
an institution can create a single digital collection rather than creating one 
set of digital content for the web and another for a table.

More info on the Omeka blog: http://omeka.org/blog/2016/05/11/oecv-beta/

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