Answers
An End-User Software License must be agreed to before software can be installed. If the software is for a refreshable braille display, or a screen reader, doesn't that make it difficult(impossible) for a person who needs the hardware in order to to read the EULA in the first place, to agree to it?
Someone can help to install it for him/her.
Also see a more produced version of this demo at yaccessibilityblog.com Victor Tsaran, www.victortsaran.net, demonstrates using iPhone 4 with his ...
Each ATM I use has a different screen layout, and of course, no audio, so how is a blind person to determine which of the screen buttons to press?
That is what the Braille is for. I did always wonder why they put Braille on a drive up ATM though.
How do I adjust my screen resolution on a braille computer?
thanks, best answer gets the reward.
control panel, display, settings.
A friend of mine is blind and uses a braille computer. He was showing me how it works and he is actually very good at using it but has one complaint. Sometimes he gets redirected to sites with pictures of naked people and when he feels the monitor screen, he gets grossed out. Is there any way he can prevent this?
You're retarded. You clearly don't know any blind people.
Yes, there are braille computer-like machines that can access the internet, but you can only view text with them...dumbass.
There are also other blind individuals LIKE MYSELF who use the computer and the internet with regular computers and text-to-speech software such as JAWS.
Grow up.
the atm buttons have braille on them most of the time. if the blind person cant see what it is asking on the screen, then why even put it. they also put it in DRIVE THRU bank machines. blind people dont usually drive. It just bugs me why.
Brail on ATMs is understandable. One could memorise the key strokes to get the thing to work. I once knew a blind man who could play the piano. The drive ups are the same as the walk ups. It is just easeyer to make them all the same.
Buy Cheap
Breakthrough design opens door to 'full screen' Braille displays ...
Monday, March 29, 2010
Imagine if your computer only allowed you to see one line at a time, no matter what you were doing – reading e-mail, looking at a Web site, doing research. That's the challenge facing blind computer users today. But new research from North Carolina State University is moving us closer to the development of a display system that would allow the blind to take full advantage of the Web and other computer applications.
"Right now, electronic Braille displays typically only show one line of text at a time. And they're very expensive," says Dr. Neil Di Spigna, a research assistant professor at NC State and co-author of a paper describing the research....




Tactile Screen Protector for iPhone 4 Braille Overlay