[bcab] Re: WebAnywhere: a free screen reader accessed via the

Sounds pretty much like ReadSpeaker which is also free to the end user but has 
a cost for the site owner and requires that they subscribe to the service.  
Same technology different application.  Personally I've always been unclear as 
to the intended audience for applications which add screenreader like 
capabilities to the Web but only on the assumption that you can get as far as 
the Browser or target website without them.  If you needed that degree of 
functionality you'd find it very difficult to get to a given site without 
assistance especially on an unfamiliar machine where you might not be aware of 
where you are starting from EG the desktop or a log-in screen.  If you areteh 
sort of user who can get around unaided but might want some help with reading 
detailed or lengthy text, announcing complex or contextual words then this is 
different to a VI type screenreader.

Adrian Higginbotham
Project manager: Learning services
Becta
Tel: Direct dial 024 7679 7333 - Becta switchboard 02476-416994.
Email: Adrian.Higginbotham@xxxxxxxxxxxx
Web: http://www.becta.org.uk/
BECTA, Millburn Hill Road, Science Park, Coventry, CV4 7JJ 

-----Original Message-----
From: bcab-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:bcab-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of 
Simon HARPER
Sent: 25 April 2008 16:02
To: bcab@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [bcab] Re: WebAnywhere: a free screen reader accessed via the

Hi Guys,
So as far as I'm aware WebAnywhere is for use on machines - mainly public 
machines when there is no access to USB or CD for security purpose; and for 
situations such as kiosks etc. It works by generating Speech for an http 
session on the server side and encoding it as MP3 - then sends it to the client 
via JavaScript calls coded into the page by a proxy. It's some pretty cool Web 
Engineering especially because the latency is not noticeable as their encode 
and send algorithms are leading edge.

Cheers
Si.

====
Simon Harper
University of Manchester (UK)

Human Centred Web Lab: http://hcw.cs.manchester.ac.uk My Site: 
http://hcw.cs.manchester.ac.uk/people/harper/
My Diary (iCal): http://hcw.cs.manchester.ac.uk/diaries/SimonHarper.ics


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On 25 Apr 2008, at 13:03, Michael Whapples wrote:

> On Fri, 2008-04-25 at 02:03 -0400, BCAB_Digest@xxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
>> Subject: [bcab] Re: WebAnywhere: a free screen reader accessed via  
>> the
>> web
>> Date: Thu, 24 Apr 2008 14:55:20 +0100
>> From: "Adrian Higginbotham" <adrian.higginbotham@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
>>
>> SaToGo isn't open source no.
>> NVDA is open source and while it isn't web based it is portable so  
>> can
>> be run from a usb stick or CD so can easily auto start without any
>> keyboard interaction at all.
>> http://www.nvda-project.org/
> WebAnywhere is opensource as well, although the indications from  
> what I
> have read is that it hasn't always.
>>
>> Would be nice if nvda and web anywhere worked together to save
>> duplicating work.
> Might be good, but that is one of the advantages of open source, they
> don't need to actually work together, the other can always learn by
> looking at the code and taking anything that looks good (I don't know
> which open source license WebAnywhere is under, and it might make it
> harder for the two to mix if it is GPL incompatible). This then means
> that they may go slightly different ways, but not actually be creating
> all the stuff themselves. Yes it is better if they work together to  
> help
> understand what they are trying to do, but it isn't as necessary as it
> might be for closed source software.
>>
>>
>> Adrian Higginbotham
>> Project manager: Learning services
>> Becta
>> Tel: Direct dial 024 7679 7333 - Becta switchboard 02476-416994.
>> Email: Adrian.Higginbotham@xxxxxxxxxxxx
>> Web: http://www.becta.org.uk/
>> BECTA, Millburn Hill Road, Science Park, Coventry, CV4 7JJ
>>
>>
>
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