via SFGate By Alejandro Martínez-Cabrera, Chronicle Staff Writer Friday, January 1, 2010 During her high school years, Lisamaria Martinez, who has been visually impaired since she was 5, carried a 25-pound backpack to school crammed with books written in Braille. But once she was introduced to...
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Articles
by
BusyBee
on 01-07-2010
Filed under: IBM, technology, Amazon.com, braille, Google, web accessibility, UC Berkeley, Federal Contracts, CVS, LightHouse for the Blind and Visually Impaired, Twitter
The major blindness organizations, the ones whose membership consists largely of people who are actually blind and visually impaired themselves, the American Council of the Blind (ACB) and the National Federation of the Blind (NFB), and Darrell Shandrow, a university student who is blind, are suing Arizona...
Posted to
Penny For Your Thoughts
by
PennyRdr
on 07-01-2009
Filed under: American Council of the Blind, ADA, Section 504, ACB, Kindle 2, Amazon.com, discrimination, Americans with Disabilities Act, lawsuit, e-book reader, National Federation of the Blind, Darrell Shandrow, textbooks, Rehabilitation Act of 1973, Department of Justice, Department of Education, Reed College, Reading Rights Coalition, Civil Rights Division, Pace University, inaccessible, text-to-speech capability, Arizona State University, Princeton University, ASU, Kindle DX, NFB, Case Western Reserve University, University of Virginia's Darden School of Business
If you live in the Los Angeles area, check out this intriguing event, and stop by the Reading Rights Coalition booth #207 in Zone B to lend your support and cheer the coalition on as they continue to advocate for access to e-books for all of us! Thank you to Media-Dis-n-Dat at blogspot.com for posting...
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GettingHired.com's Own, BusyBee's Blog
by
BusyBee
on 04-28-2009
Filed under: National Federation of the Blind, blind, Amazon.com, Kindle 2, mainstream access to books, print disabilities, Reading Rights Coalition, text-to-speech, dyslexia, spinal cord injury, Randy Shaw, University of California at Los Angeles, equal education, e-book reader, LA Times Festival of Books, Marc Maurer, learning issues, processing issues, strokes, seniors, low vision, a way for books to reach a broader market, Deborah Kent, civil rights issue
We were delighted to learn that Amazon.com, responding to an online petition asking for accessible controls on the Kindle 2, has promised to make the reading device's controls speak aloud. That is great news for people who cannot see the controls; now people who are blind and visually impaired will...
Posted to
GettingHired.com's Own, BusyBee's Blog
by
BusyBee
on 04-06-2009
Filed under: Visually Impaired, blind, Amazon.com, learning or processing issues, Kindle 2, seniors losing vision, online petition, e-books, mainstream access to books, demonstration, the Authors' Guild, print disabilities, spinal cord injuries, people recovering from strokes, Reading Rights Coalition, text-to-speech, Amazon, dyslexia