Steve Green wrote:
I am currently doing a review of all the screen readers that are available.
This will take a few months because there are more than you may imagine.
There are several open source screen readers available for Linux. One of
note is LSR http://live.gnome.org/LSR, which was
/ First Accessibility
www.testpartners.co.uk
www.accessibility.co.uk
-Original Message-
From: listdad@webstandardsgroup.org [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Behalf Of Matthew Smith
Sent: 12 January 2007 22:36
To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Subject: [WSG] Free Screen Readers (was: Logo and H1's
Quoth Rob O'Rourke at 01/13/07 08:25...
I've not managed to get a screen-reader working very well for testing so
far, does anyone know of one (preferably free) that provides a fairly
typical screen reader experience?
JAWS is a bit out of my price range.
You could try the Fangs[1] extension
On 1/12/07, Matthew Smith [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Quoth Rob O'Rourke at 01/13/07 08:25...
I've not managed to get a screen-reader working very well for testing so
far, does anyone know of one (preferably free) that provides a fairly
typical screen reader experience?
JAWS is a bit out of
Mihael Zadravec wrote:
The problem in my country is that we speak slovenian :) and I don't know of
any SR software that suportes that language, so it is pretty much
useless as
we pronounce word different from english or other supported languages.
Maybe
anyone knows about the SR software that
On 1/13/07, Mark Harris [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Mihael Zadravec wrote:
The problem in my country is that we speak slovenian :) and I don't know
of
any SR software that suportes that language, so it is pretty much
useless as
we pronounce word different from english or other supported
Hi everyone,
While we are on the subject I remembered something I came across
ages ago and never took the time to get to know how to use it.
The site is http://www.webbie.org.uk
The page that explains its use is
http://www.webbie.org.uk/webbiefordesigners.htm and definitely worth
more