RE: JFW/PROGRAMMING

  • From: Nicholas Cordilione <Nicholas.Cordilione@xxxxxxxxx>
  • To: jfw@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Mon, 18 Apr 2011 09:20:24 -0400

Tom, & others:  I think the vintage text to speech unit you are talking
about was called "pcsaid"

thanks.

Nick Cordilione
Endicott Interconnect Technologies
Department #0040 (internal/vendor tool gage calibration recall services)
Phone:  (607) 755-2294.
Internal pager:  (607) 239-3990
External pager: (607) 239-3990


                                                                           
             "Tom Lange"                                                   
             <trlange@pacbell.                                             
             net>                                                       To 
             Sent by:                  <jfw@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>                 
             jfw-bounce@freeli                                          cc 
             sts.org                                                       
                                                                   Subject 
                                       RE: JFW/PROGRAMMING                 
             04/16/2011 11:46                                              
             AM                                                            
                                                                           
                                                                           
             Please respond to                                             
             jfw@xxxxxxxxxxxxx                                             
                                                                           
                                                                           




Hi,
I saw one of these devices back in 1979, if memory serves.  I was working
in one of IBM’s L.A. offices and my boss and I flew up to San Jose, where
Bob LaGrone, an assembly programmer and fellow IBMer, had one.  IBM called
it the “SAID” device.  S A I D stood for Synthetic Audio Interface Driver.
It was very cool and I could have gotten one pretty easily, but as I
mentioned in an earlier post, it could read the ebcdic character set but
not the APL character set which I used for programming.
Tom


From: jfw-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:jfw-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf
Of Bob W
Sent: Friday, April 15, 2011 7:36 PM
To: jfw@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: JFW/PROGRAMMING

Yeah, I remember those beauties. You had speech from the moment you turned
the power on.
They weren't very versatile but they were quite a work horse.
Don't remember what they were called.
I always wished someone would build something like that for pcs.

Bob

"Those who are too smart to engage in politics are punished by being
governed by those who are dumber." Aristotle
 ----- Original Message -----
 From: George Marshall
 To: jfw@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
 Sent: Friday, April 15, 2011 10:39 AM
 Subject: Re: JFW/PROGRAMMING

 Tom:
 I am surprised IBM didn't give you one of there terminals with speech. I
 also programmed on IBM 360,370 and 9000's. I think about 1982 IBM
 developed a terminal with speech, had a numeric like pad attached with a
 cord used to control reading of the screen.
 George R. Marshall
 marshall.geoma4@xxxxxxxxx
 ----- Original Message -----
 From: Tom Lange
 To: jfw@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
 Sent: Thursday, April 14, 2011 11:51 PM
 Subject: Re: JFW/PROGRAMMING

 Hi,
 I wish I'd known about JAWS back in the Eighties, it might have made life
 easier for me in some respects.  I did mainframe programming for IBM from
 1978 to 1994 in a VM environment, programming using the APL programming
 language up until around 1987 or so.  After that I programmed using Rexx,
 which was very English-like.

 I didn't know about screen reading solutions for the PC until 1994, so all
 through that time I was at IBM, I used an Optacon to read the screen.
 That was actually pretty cool, if a bit inefficient.

 Tom

  ----- Original Message -----
  From: Bob W
  To: jfw@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  Sent: Thursday, April 14, 2011 8:20 AM
  Subject: Re: JFW/PROGRAMMING

  Hi Prakash.

  I am retired now, but was a mainframe programmer from the early seventies
  to the late 1990s. I used jaws from the early 80s to my retirement. I
  don't think I could have done programming without it.

  What you are proposing--going from a visual programmer to a nonvisual
  programmer--is a daunting, but not impossible, challenge.

  I suspect that you do not know Braille. Knowledge of Braille and an
  80-cell display would be a great tool to have in your arsenal. You don't
  need to learn literary Braille, or even grade two Braille (though this
  might be helpful. But, I would suggest that you emphasize learning
  computer Braille, which in some ways is superior to literary Braille.

  As I said earlier, your challenges may seem daunting, but they can also
  be fun, and they may enhance your creativity.

  Good luck, and when you run into problems, this list is a great place to
  seek answers.

  Bob




  A learning experience is one of those things that says, 'You know that
  thing you just did? Don't do that.' Douglas Adams
  ----- Original Message -----
  From: john.falter
  To: jfw@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  Sent: Wednesday, April 13, 2011 11:04 PM
  Subject: Re: JFW/PROGRAMMING

  I programmed in assembly language and Cobol for 8 years using JAWS..

   ----- Original Message -----
   From: PRAKASH P
   To: JFW@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
   Cc: PRAKASH P
   Sent: Wednesday, April 13, 2011 10:42 AM
   Subject: JFW/PROGRAMMING

   I HAVE RECENTLY  COME TO A POINT WHERE I CANNOT DO ANYTHING VISUALLY ON
   THE COMPUTER SCREEN.
   I HAVE BEEN USING zOOMtEXT AUDIO  EFFECTIVELY UNTIL NOW. But now I am
   told JFW  is the way to go.

   Can someone give  me a good  view/opinion of how effective/efficient
   would it b to do programming for a living with or without JFW.

   I have 20 years of programming experience with MS environments being the
   latest.  I am able to read all ctooll tip  based text  and the program
   text itself  but  not sure if I can  compete with
   The visually   enhanced set.  I know I have much learning to do but I
   would like  a seasoned person to give  a sense of whats possible.
   I am a good learner if not a speedy one.

   I am trying to  figure out if I should or should not give up on serious
   implementation responsibilities.

   Thanks for any and all  input  I can get.

   Prakash



   Prakash



         This email and any attachments are intended solely for the use of
         the individual or entity to whom it is addressed and may be
         confidential and/or privileged.


         If you are not one of the named recipients or have received this
         email in error,


         (i) you should not read, disclose, or copy it,


         (ii) please notify sender of your receipt by reply email and
         delete this email and all attachments,


         (iii) Dassault Systemes does not accept or assume any liability or
         responsibility for any use of or reliance on this email.


         For other languages, go to
         http://www.3ds.com/terms/email-disclaimer

$U�zV�y�b�K     hh��Z��m����
�睢k������r��I���ا�f��)��+-��i��b��-��݅�&�X��)ߡ�"��+��h����+az7ar��b��ا���rب��見-jg�����azX��ǧv+m�7�~���+-���N�����r��y����b�f��)��+-���jg������·���-~���+-����+a����n�˛���m觶����r�b��+r�z�hq�^u�a���
0~���+-�����܆+޳���   
mz�ڶ+�j�!����Z�m����v�nW��o�d������0���㝻�f�����Z�����'q�籦���azX���,���z+�u����^�+-��a{�����b����
���'��h��azkh����Qj�^��'��-����h�w�j����f�{�祊�l��

Other related posts: