[ntnm] Re: Speakon a-technic news reader

  • From: Isaac Porat <isaac@xxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: ntnm@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Sat, 31 May 2014 07:15:37 +0100

Hi Derek

SpeakOn relies on speech only, there is no Braille support. There is no support for magnification either because there is nothing on the screen to magnify but for a little box with the caption 'SpeakOn'. I should also emphasize that it is intended for people who fill comfortable with computers and people need to decide if they fall into this category.

The a-technic reader works with whatever screen reader or magnifier you are using; it has no support for anything in itself it simply brings up your internet browser, you then use the screen reader / magnifier in the usual way.

I developed SpeakOn for my own use as a totally blind man (of course taking into account suggestions from others). My motivation was to develop a system where you can listen to radio, music, read books newspaper and listen to podcasts using the same interface because I hate remembering different shortcuts for different applications. If people find it useful, great. If they prefer something else it is fine too.

Regards
Isaac


On 30/05/2014 23:11, Derek Hornby wrote:
Hi Isaac
Will speakon  support braille!

  a-technic news reader worked  very well with braille
Displays.

Regards,   Derek
-----Original Message-----
From: ntnm-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:ntnm-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf
Of Isaac Porat
Sent: Friday, May 30, 2014 10:45 PM
To: ntnm@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [ntnm] Re: Speakon a-technic news reader

Hi Derek

The short answer is that it does not work in the same way, I suggest
that it is very easy to use when you know how it works but you can make
your own mind when I make available  the new version which would be
compatible with the latest format changes.
I would be happy to help those who wants to give it a go.
SpeakOn is only available for Windows PC or laptops you can use  a
standard keyboard or an external numerical keypad if you wish.

The a-technic news reader constructed linked multi HTML pages local
structure on your computer.  This launched your web browser say Internet
Explorer or Firefox and you went up and down the pages (or jumped using
heading navigation) with your screen reader.
I used it for a while some years ago and it did a good job for me
especially with the ability of creating links to a search.

The advantage of the a-technic reader was that you didn't have to learn
anything new beyond using your screen reader.  The disadvantage of this
approach at least for me was that it was slow having to drill into a
section and coming back up again. I also did not want to bother with the
website or an email attachment.

SpeakOn is self voicing and a screen reader is not required. It works
mostly like a Windows application but there are some differences.
With SpeakOn you don't have to learn short cuts if you don't want to,
you can operate it if you wish using the Up, Down, Left, Right and Enter
key (some function keys are used for volume and rate adjustments.

SpeakOn can do many things working mostly in exactly the same way but
the following  relates to NTNM eText publications.

Firstly you don't have to download from a website or receive the
publications using email, you can do all these automatically from within
SpeakOn itself. This means that you can start to read your favourite
publication within about 30 seconds from the time  that you sit in front
of your computer and decide that you want to read say today's Guardian.

What you do within SpeakOn is browse the publications catalogue in its
library and add to favourite the publications you like to read most.
Then when you want to read you simply select the publication and it is
downloaded automatically and SpeakOn starts to read to you in about 5
seconds.  You press Enter to start to read and Enter again to stop
reading. You press Left and Right to go between levels of navigation:
section, sub-section paragraph sentence etc.  You press Up and Down to
jump according to these levels.  So you can navigate and read your
newspaper with one hand drinking coffee with the other.
Reading is much faster than with the a-technic as you don't have to
drill into the sections.

   With SpeakOn you can create (in a similar way to the a-technic reader)
a list of articles according to search terms these can be very simple or
complicated for example all article with the name Labour but not Ukip
(no political preference intended).
You can do this again and again with different search terms.

If you read a newspaper half way, when you start SpeakOn again it would
remember where you left off, you can also use bookmarks if you wish.

You can save individual articles and copy section of text or complete
articles into the clipboard.

I suppose you would need to decide if you want to learn something new
and if you want to give it a go.

I am waiting for RNIB to implement some features on their servers which
theoretically should not take long.  When done
   I would be able to release the new version. Until this is done SpeakOn
is not available for NTNM publications.

The above relates to eText, SpeakOn is able also to stream  and download
NTNM audio publications and this feature would be available at the same
time.

Regards
Isaac



On 30/05/2014 20:17, Derek Hornby wrote:
Does speakon  work same as  a-technic news reader?
I mean from  user point of view are they  same?
Regards,   Derek











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