On Mon, 6 Apr 2020, Ali Corbin wrote: >https://www.library.ca.gov/btbl/ >They'll be able to provide her with downloadable audio books. On Mon, Apr 06, 2020 at 11:32:56AM -0700, Rich Shepard wrote: > I believe that she's checked that source and found little of interest.
Open source opportunity here - I presume the public telephone system can be used to "broadcast" to many dialins simultaneously. Imagine a nationwide community of volunteers who read a book that they own over the phone to small groups of 5 to 15 blind listeners. Those listeners first call a "catalog number" to find find an upcoming reading they want to listen to, then join into the conference call at scheduled times. The volunteers don't just read, but interact with their listeners. Amateur but involved. And a whole lot better than twiddling thumbs in front of a TV. My mother read to me when I was little. I read the detective novels she liked to her when she was dying. Note: contemporary detective novels use words that my mother taught me not to use when I was little ... :-/ Of course, with the current unconstitutional perpetual copyright system, some authors will piss and moan about lost sales and stolen intellectual property. I'd like to see what a jury would do to those greedy authors and their lawyers if they attack the disabled. I post this here, rather than plug-talk, because there is likely to be open source software and services that enable this, or can be modified to do so. A for-pay commercial service (like Zoom) might seem easier, but an informal service provided by informal volunteers using transparent open software builds trust and connection using domestic (not offshore) resources. The United States will need such community building to survive the November elections. Keith -- Keith Lofstrom [email protected] _______________________________________________ PLUG mailing list [email protected] http://lists.pdxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug
