Well, would be a great thing for the VFO team, to get their resources 
together and make such a thing possible. Let's get a box that you 
connect to the external display connector on the back of your computer. 
Let the box have something like 4, or even 8 GB of RAM, enough to hold 
your screen reader, all apps and settings, and if necessary a secondary 
screen reader. Let the box have a USB connectorr, for updating the 
onboard software, when new releases come out.


Now, feed the box with all the info from the screen directly, and let it 
process that info. Gone would be all the internal conflicts with 
Windows, Office or any other software not leaving the screen reader 
access to the screen content. The box would basically just be operating 
like an OCR of the screen content, at any given moment. All controlling 
could either be done by dedicated keys on the box, or you could (first 
the OS is loaded), let the user control it by keystrokes on the 
keyboard, which would be send to it either wirelessly, or through an USB 
cable.


You now could operate the Bios, fool around with cheap alternatives to 
Office, like modern versions of WordPerfect (which many of us old-timers 
enjoyed). Or, you could finally go free, and install things like 
OpenOffice. Should you, for whatever reason want to go for any other OS 
than Windows, you just run Linux or whatever. Since the box would 
interpret signals sent to the display, it would no longer depend on one 
OS in particular.


OH, WELL! Still dreams of tomorrow are permitted, ain't they? Trouble 
is, if they invented such a unit, they would have done something really 
great. And that is not going to happen, my guess goes.


I do know, that at least one of the German Braille displays, back in the 
late 80's/early 90's - the Braillo display - had a board inserted into 
the computer, and would be up running even at BIOS level, long before 
anything booted. Used  to have that one, numerous years ago, and was 
able to set up computers from scratch for my customers. Then came all 
the laptops, with no wa of installing such an extension board, and gone 
was the whole idea. Today, with fast processors, well-established OCR 
technology, and cheap memory - a Screen Connector-based box, should be 
possible for the dreamers. And maybe would have boosted the market for 
the screen reader industry.


y

David

On 10/25/2016 11:14 PM, Dave via Talk wrote:
> Hi Kevin,
>
> So there was a way to get to the BIOS.    Since my first PC back in the
> mid 80's I've wanted to be able to get in there to make changes.  Still
> would in fact.
>
> Would be very nice to Update, Fix, and Repair my own Hardware, all with
> Speech.
>
>
> Grumpy Dave
>
>

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