If you like good humor, try the Canadian TV show Corner Gas. Seasons 2 through the present all have described video on the commercial DVD's.

Bruce

On Thu, 5 Mar 2009, Dave McElroy WA6BEF wrote:

Oh really?  What planet do you live on?  <lol>

NFB and their ilk kind of did it to us when they got the feds to say that it
was no longer a requirement.  So now if you really want descriptive
programming you have to find it outside of our shores.

-----Original Message-----
From: pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org]
On Behalf Of Kane Brolin
Sent: Thursday, March 05, 2009 1:42 PM
To: j...@freelists.org
Cc: Blind iPod Mailing List; pc-audio@pc-audio.org
Subject: Descriptive Video on Commercial DVDs and Downloads

Hi, folks.

I'm probably about to ask a question that's painfully obvious to many.
But I'm showing up at the descriptive video/SAP party much later than
some.  I'm writing to the JAWS list because I am a JAWS user.  I'm
writing to the Blind iPod list because purchasing video content on
iTunes is now accessible through use of the J-tunes interface.  So I
hope others view this question as at least somewhat relevant.

I'm presuming, first of all,  that most Hollywood feature films on DVD
come with a descriptive video track encoded somewhere on them.  I'm
presuming the same could be true with downloadable films and TV shows,
too, as from iTunes.  Certainly, most DVDs representing TV programs
where action was described in the first place, should have that same
DVS output on the subsequent DVD release.  If this is true, I'm
wondering about the following:

1.  How can I be sure, if a film or TV show is downloaded, to get the
download version that has descriptive video encoded?  Is there a good
source for such material?  Is there a way I can know for sure about
this feature before I buy?

2.  When playing such downloaded or DVD content on the computer, is
there a software player that is fairly accessible and which also has a
menu option I can invok for activating or turning off the
descriptions?  I've not seen this in RealPlayer or Windows Media
Player, but maybe I'm just not looking in the right place.

3.  Am I being completely naive here?  Obviously, I know a lot of
stuff isn't accessible on its face, and I realize legislation in front
of Congress is attempting to make much of this universal.  I've heard
of some people going to a place like the Serotek network to download
versions of films that have been uploaded specifically for those
wanting video description.  But is this truly necessary?  Or can the
same content be obtained through regular channels with just a little
bit of work on the part of the blind consumer?

Just trying to get a handle on this issue, for my own benefit and for
others I may encounter.

Kind regards,

-Kane

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