[ddots-l] Re: how about blind programmers and developers joining?

  • From: "Sean A. Cummins" <Sean@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <ddots-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Thu, 24 Nov 2005 10:13:23 -0700

Dear David I. and George B.,



The answers are at hand, it just a matter of coordination and money. Even in the light of blindness, money is what will make the wheel turn.



Let me give you all a bit of a background in the Assistive technology business.



Ray Kurzweil back in the late seventies developed an algorithm that would later be used in decoding information for the military as well as for the blind in the original Kurzweil reading system. Ray later started the Kurzweil Music System as a spin off of his advanced algorithms that he had developed for the printed word and military uses. Early in the eighties, Kurzweil Reading System and Xerox Imaging got on board together with the capital for the first "portable reading system" in the Kurzweil Personal Reading system which also developed a smaller scanner for Xerox. What I'm trying to illustrate is, if there isn't a mutually beneficial result, that there isn't enough money for anyone company to undertake the task of developing a keyboard where the research cost will exceed the profit margin. Simple math! Anything that is developed for access should benefit the general buyers market as well, then you will willingly get the attention and respect of manufacturers. I had pointed this out in my email to the company that we all wrote regarding the pitch fixing plug-ins. Let me illustrate for you!



1.. Speech output was originally developed for the blind as you might guess and now its uses are every where and in just about everything from car, GPS systems, phones, toilets. well, almost everything! But you get the point.


2.. Voice actuation, speech input, was developed for the physically impaired and is now in computers of all kind, GPS systems etc. etc.



3.. Cirvicular motors, motors that can quickly change directions in almost an instance. These were originally developed for the wheel chair! And Whether or not most people know it, but our whole modern society depends on these motors in things such as: read/write heads in floppy, CDROMS, DVDROMS and hard drives, elevator doors, lift gates on trucks and the list goes on and on!



My point I'm trying to stress, is that if we present an idea to a company or individuals, it must have the element of being mutually beneficial for both able-bodied as well as the disabled. When they see the dollars and sense to the idea, it will be readily embraced.




Ray himself is a very phenomenal accomplished pianist and is not insensitive to our plight. Again, back in the eighties/early nineties Ray had created a minimal speech output keyboard for Stevie Wonder. He had taken one of the Kurzweil 250's and modified it by adding the DecTalk speech to the keyboard. This keyboard was use in many of Stevie's songs such as "I Just Called and Part Time Lover".



I personally would prefer to approach this from an innovative posture, rather then an ADA push!



Give it some thought gang and let's see if we can just support the ones that have already flown the computer recording doors wide open for us!! Dancing Dots has my vote and grateful appreciation this Thanksgiving.



Take Care,



Sean A. Cummins


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