[access-uk] Re: RNIB, how inefficient are they?

  • From: "Iain Lackie" <ilackie@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Thu, 22 Jan 2015 15:02:32 -0000

Not necessarily. If you are using a Braille display, you are not being read to.


Iain

-----Original Message----- From: Clive.Lever@xxxxxxxxxxx
Sent: Thursday, January 22, 2015 2:57 PM
To: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [access-uk] Re: RNIB, how inefficient are they?

Hello,

If you are using Tablet devices to access the written word, you are being read to, albeit by a mgadget that you own. If you read braille, you are reading, and with that can come the benefits of literacy. It's a faff to have to review a word to find out how it is spelled, so that you can, say, write it correctly in a study assignment. If you mis-spell it, the appearance of your work will suffer, and you could be marked down for it. Whatever happened to the Right To Read campaign, and would it be different from "the right to be read to?"

Best,
Clive



-----Original Message-----
From: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Steve Nutt
Sent: 22 January 2015 14:36
To: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [access-uk] Re: RNIB, how inefficient are they?

Hi Mike,

I have to disagree that a page of Braille makes no sound. If you listen carefully to In Touch, you can hear Peter White's fingers flying over the Braille. <Smile>.

All the best

Steve

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-----Original Message-----
From: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Mike Ray
Sent: 22 January 2015 14:22
To: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [access-uk] Re: RNIB, how inefficient are they?


Braille is important:

1. A piece of paper with dots on it doesn't stop working when the power goes off and it doesn't have batteries that go flat.

2. Small items can be labelled with Braille and negate the need for gadgets like the Pen Friend which, although a fantastic little gizmo, is overkill for stuff like labelling CD cases.

3.  Braille not3es and note taking are easier when you're on the move.

4. Braille is less intrusive if you're sitting in a metting/conference with a whole bunch of sighted folks. If you're giving some kind of presentation just a page with a few lines of Braille on it makes no sound and is, after all, synonymous with how a sighted person refers to notes in a similar situation.

I would encourage, ne plead, all visually impaired youngsters to continue to learn and keep using Braille.

We owe it to those who have gone before and those coming after us to keep it alive.



On 22/01/2015 14:15, Jackie Brown wrote:
Well Karl, you are definitely wide of the mark on that score although,
of course, you are entitled to your opinion, (smile).  I agree it has
become
an
even more expensive format, but one that those of us who prefer it are
entitled to have provided when ordering items from RNIB.  I notice
that
when
I order from them nowadays, I have to ask, and often have clarified,
that
I
want Braille instructions.  For smaller items it really doesn't
matter,
but
for something more complex it is useful.


Kind regards,

Jackie Brown
Emails: thebrownsplace@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Jackieannbrown62@xxxxxxxxx
jackie@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Website: www.thebrownsplace.info
Twitter: @thebrownsplace
Skype: thejackmate

-----Original Message-----
From: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On
Behalf
Of
Karl Proud
Sent: 22 January 2015 13:49
To: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [access-uk] Re: RNIB, how inefficient are they?

I guess that some people do see the printed word as old tech,
certainly
the
school my kids go to seem pretty obsessed with tablets etc.  I'm
afraid
that
I am one of those blind folk who do consider braille old fuddy duddy
technology, but then again I'm wrong about most things.

Karl




On 22 Jan 2015, at 1:33 pm, Mike Ray <mike@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:


The RNIB now seems to be run by suits with little or no grasp of what
the customers really need.

In a world where everything is being dumbed-down to a lowest common
denominator what we are now seeing is charity bosses who see little
else than the bottom line.  How they got to that bottom line is of
little importance to them.  Just making the expenditure smaller and
the income bigger seems to be an end in itself now.

And no doubt one of the things that is pared to the bone to make the
bottom
line look better is training for customer facing staff and expenditure
on what is seen as old technology.  And sadly Braille is perceived by
sighted folks, and a lot of blind folks now too, as old tech.
Although presumably sighted folks don't regard reading printed words as old tech.




On 22/01/2015 13:16, Clive.Lever@xxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
Hi Dave,

Don't get me on my soap box about this one. Cynically, I sometimes
wonder
whether the more they can dissuade congenitally blind people from
blocking their resources with loads of braille, the more they can
concentrate on their pet subject: "sight loss". If they tell customers
as a matter of course that braille copies will cost loads, take ages
or generate
boatloads
of paper, they will get the answer they nudged their customer to give:
"Ok then, I'll have an audio version". Then they will say: "more and
more
people
are using audio and fewer are reading braille, so Braille's on its way
out".
Whooppee! They won't have to devote resources to it. Is there such a
thing as "Lowp! (the opposite of hype), or of demoting rather than
promoting a service? I encountered similar problems when I was asking
for computer manuals as far back as 1982, so sadly, your tale leads me
to think nothing has changed, except that the Institute sometimes
appears to be suffering from sight loss itself..
.i
t's lost sight of the ball! I've usually found that a rough equation
stands me in good stead: Two-and-a-half to three braille pages for
every
a4
side of dense print in a pretty standard font size. So, when I read
the original was 96 pages, I thought "300's going to be nearer the
mark. I
read
on, And surprise, surprise!

Best,
Clive

-----Original Message-----
From: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On
Behalf Of Dave Sheridan
Sent: 22 January 2015 12:37
To: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [access-uk] RNIB, how inefficient are they?



I recently received a Plextalk pocket portable daisy player as a present.
The kind person who gave me this enquired about braille instructions
and
was
told that they could do this but they would be about 600 pages. The
person accepted that audio instructions would suffice. After receipt
of said
player
I rang to ask for braille instructions and was told the same thing. I
asked
for the braille copy. Interestingly the audio contents goes up to page
96
so
I was a little confused why this would translate to 600 braille pages.
I've
just received the instructions in 3 volumes totalling just under 300
A4 pages. Clearly those people providing potential customers with
information should be well informed and clearly they are not:

To add to this a friend of mine who took out a subscription to the
talking
book service has been perplexed by RNIB sending books which don't
appear
on
the list she supplied them with. This has occurred twice now within a
short
period of time, firstly with books she hadn't ordered appearing on a
pen drive sent to her and since then having changed to disc she has
been sent other titles not ordered by her. Having experienced this
myself over some considerable time before I was blunt with them I I do
wonder why their customer service is so poor. As you have to ask for
braille instructions these days you would think they would give good
information and not try to put you off getting them to do the job they are there to do.

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--
Michael A. Ray
Analyst/Programmer
Witley, Surrey, South-east UK

Don't judge my disability until you witness my ability

Interested in accessibility on the Raspberry Pi?
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