[bksvol-discuss] Re: Clarifying the stripper and page number issue for Monday Meeting

  • From: Guido Corona <guidoc@xxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Fri, 1 Apr 2005 11:07:33 -0600

Normalizing means isolating the header on its own line.  If it is at the 
top of the page it should not be preceeded by anything, and should be 
followed by at least one blank line.  The Header should not contain any 
garbage characters.  There should be a clear page number in it,  rather 
than a number with misrecognized chars.  E.g.  page 112 should not be 
listed as llz.
If the header contains the author's name or the books title ensure that 
these are correct and not misspelled.  I personally  remove from headers 
all author's name and book titles.  I tend to leave in only  the page 
number.

For chapter headers instead, I want to make sure the stripper leaves them 
alone,  so after correcting any misspellings I split the header on two 
consecutive lines.  E.g.

CHAPTER
ONE

Guido


Guido Dante Corona
IBM Accessibility Center,  Austin Tx.
Research Division,
Phone:  512. 838. 9735.
Email: guidoc@xxxxxxxxxxx
Web:  http://www.ibm.com/able




"siss52" <siss52@xxxxxxx> 
Sent by: bksvol-discuss-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
04/01/2005 10:11 AM
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Hi Guido,
 
How is normalizing done?  All I have is Word.  Is that what the toolbar 
Normal means? 
 
Sue S.
 
----- Original Message ----- 
From: Guido Corona 
To: bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
Sent: Friday, April 01, 2005 8:34 AM
Subject: [bksvol-discuss] Re: Clarifying the stripper and page number 
issue for Monday Meeting


If you leave page numbers in a way that the stripper can recognize 
them/strip them, I believe that the Bookshare Daisy encoder will remove 
them from the bodytext but insert them in a page number tag.  As such, you 
should still be able to go to page X with Victor soft or other daysy 
reader.  The trick of course is to normalize page numbers during the book 
editing process. 

Guido 


Guido Dante Corona
IBM Accessibility Center,  Austin Tx.
Research Division,
Phone:  512. 838. 9735.
Email: guidoc@xxxxxxxxxxx
Web:  http://www.ibm.com/able



"Kenneth A. Cross" <crossk@xxxxxxxxxxxx> 
Sent by: bksvol-discuss-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
03/31/2005 09:23 PM 

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[bksvol-discuss] Re: Clarifying the stripper and page number  issue for 
Monday Meeting








The issue is to be able to refer other people, not BookShare users, to the
exact place where material can be found.  This is necessary for 
footnoting,
for using the book's contents page, and for being referred by the book
itself.
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Mary Otten" <maryotten@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Thursday, March 31, 2005 8:58 PM
Subject: [bksvol-discuss] Re: Clarifying the stripper and page number 
issue
for Monday Meeting


> Cindy,
> Many of the devices we use to listen to books remember where you were 
when
you close out of the book. And if they don't, then what good is a page
number for finding the place? Better to just enter something like
> *** which you can then search on and find your place that way and get 
rid
of the ***. I'd never remember a page number from one time to the next.
Braille hard copy readers use bookmarks just like print hard copy
> readers do. I can't speak to the folks who use paperless braille, like 
the
braille note. I don't know if that device remembers your stopping place, 
but
I'd venture to say that a page number in and of itself offers no help
> unless you remember it from one time to the next, whether one is using
speech or braille to access the print. The Daisy format is good, because 
it
offers the ability to get to the page number if one wants it and not if 
one
> doesn't. It satisfies both categories. Retained print page numbers are
used to  provide the page numbers for the daisy books.
> The difference between reading hard copy braille and listening to speech
is that with the former, you have the ability to automatically skip things
like top of page headers or page numbers, like you can do when you
> read print. If one is listening with speech, one has no choice but to 
hear
all that stuff because one listens serially without the option to just
ignore the existence of the stuff at the top of the page.
> Mary
>
>
>



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