Sara Ford - Accessibility and Visual Studio
- Posted: Apr 27, 2004 at 12:26 PM
- 83,086 Views
- 11 Comments
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The interviewer asks Sara what VS sounds like with a screen reader, and most of the rest interview ends up being Sara trying to remember what the screen reader would say--when a simple demo would've been more effective.
I understand there's probably issues of confidentiality, but surely something a little more complex than talking heads should be possible?
I think Channel9 has a nice community cable vibe going for it: it exposes people, even people inside the big house, to some pretty neat technology, people, and happenings. Sara's video was fine for a brief intro to the topic. Personally, I'd like to see it covered in more depth, but that's probably a task more suited to the MSDN TV guys (if they weren't so dang busy showing us Longhorn features
More on topic, there are many people out there who would benefit from better accessibility support in the software they use. And now, if you want to support Tablet PC users who use voice command to control apps, you have yet another reason to push programming for accessibility.
Curt
In retrospect, maybe having placed a microphone next to one of the speakers (provided there wasn't any feedback) would have allowed people to hear a screen reader navigating the Start - Run Dialog. I wouldn't make for a very good screen reader. =)
If you're running Windows XP and you're curious what a basic screen reader sounds like, Windows XP comes with a basic screen reader called Narrator. Just go to Accessories - Accessibility - Narrator.
I mentioned two other screen readers, JAWS and Window-Eyes. Both have demo versions available on their websites.
JAWS:
http://www.freedomscientific.com/fs_products/software_jaws5intro.asp
Window Eyes:
http://www.gwmicro.com/products/
Thanks!
-sara
Roger that, homey!
But you're right, an extra mike would indeed have done the job!
Yep, WindowsKey+U does the trick too. For every new keyboard shortcut i learn, i forget an older one. =)
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