Re: Here is the PDF file I'm talking about!

  • From: "Brandon Keith" <brandonboy13@xxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <jfw@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Thu, 14 Oct 2010 12:09:35 -0700

OK, so I have Kurzweil 1000 and translated the pictures. When I saved it as a 
word document I went to read it with Jaws and some funky stuff is going on... 
Does anyone know what's going on with words just being spoken as say a w 
instead of the full word? With the read all function everything works just 
fine. I also get this problem in Notepad. Is this a margin issue?
What are the best margins for Jaws to work with?
    Thank you and attached is the document I'm talking about

Brandon Keith

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From: G.W. Cox 
Sent: Thursday, October 14, 2010 10:51 AM
To: jfw@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
Subject: Re: Here is the PDF file I'm talking about!


I worked Omnipage on it. There's something like 150 pages. From the 
applications key menu, I converted it to Word.
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Farfar Carlson 
  To: jfw@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
  Sent: Thursday, October 14, 2010 9:25 AM
  Subject: Re: Here is the PDF file I'm talking about!


  Openbook from Freedom Scientific will work on these, as well as those already 
printed out on paper.

  I've also seen others recommending Omnipage.

  You are basically needing an optical character recognition application that 
can process your image files as though you're sending them to a printer.


  Dave
  Created in the Audio Recording and Mixing Studios, San Jose, California


    ----- Original Message ----- 
    From: Brandon Keith 
    To: jfw@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
    Sent: Thursday, October 14, 2010 07:52
    Subject: Re: Here is the PDF file I'm talking about!


    Thank you,
    Are there any good programs that do the character recognition that are 
accessible?
    I get documents like this all the time either for school or work and I need 
to know what they are saying in a matter of hours. I have to then drop 
everything I'm doing and go find a sighted person who can read this document to 
me, then type it out by hand as they read it to me.
    It is very frustrating and sighted people can't tell the difference between 
this PDF document and normal text PDFs.
    Thank you,

    Brandon Keith

    Check out
    MySpace: http://www.myspace.com/brandonkeithcom
    Also add me on facebook! 
    brandonkeith


    From: GlenJan 
    Sent: Thursday, October 14, 2010 12:10 AM
    To: jfw@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
    Subject: Re: Here is the PDF file I'm talking about!


    Hello Dave,
    Thanks for that info;  I was aware of this but was trying to make the point 
- badly - that calling a document a PDF file does not necessarily make it 
accessible.
    Glen


    On 14-Oct-2010 17:58, Farfar Carlson wrote: 
      Glen,

      PDF files are often created as each page being an image of something. 
This usually happens when a PDF file is created from a scanner. So it's okay 
that it's PDF.

      Dave
      Created in the Audio Recording and Mixing Studios, San Jose, California


        ----- Original Message ----- 
        From: GlenJan 
        To: jfw@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
        Sent: Wednesday, October 13, 2010 23:45
        Subject: Re: Here is the PDF file I'm talking about!


        Brandon,
        This is nothing more than a series of pictures, one picture per page 
which has been saved with a PDF file extension.
        No idea why this one has been saved with a PDF file extension, but it's 
still a picture and therefore should have a file extension of .jpg.
        To make it accessible to a screen reader, you would need to use Optical 
Character Recognition to turn it into text.
        HTH.
        Glen


        On 14-Oct-2010 16:06, Brandon Keith wrote: 
          Here, 
          I forgot to attach it on the last email!  
          Thank you, 

          Brandon Keith 

          Check out
          MySpace: http://www.myspace.com/brandonkeithcom
          Also add me on facebook! 
          brandonkeith 

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