Re: firefox portable or full
jene
i downloaded the portable program
when i installed it, yup i was asked to
install it, which i did
i clicked on the file to open the program i got a
message
it is something like this
close all instances of firefox portable, firefox
cannot update when it is open
there are 2 buttons, ok and cancel
what to do here
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Saturday, March 7, 2020 10:58
PM
Subject: Re: [TechTalk] firefox portable
or full
The page to download Firefox portable
is:
There may be something on the page about
downloading the portable apps installer but don't worry about that.
I believe you should use the link that says
something like
Download from PortableApps.com
Its been a long time but I
believe that is the link to use.
Gene
----- Original Message
-----
Sent: Saturday, March 07, 2020 7:26 PM
Subject: [TechTalk] firefox portable or full
guys can anyone or jene share again
thanks
|
|
locked
Re: warning if you doing business
Hi all,
Wow! Not much I can say here except that the system needs to change. All I want to do is send you hugs! That won't help in the long-run, but you are special, did you know that? God breaks the mold every, single, time He makes a new person. There's nobody like you! You are His singular creation. He made you, and he loves you! Don't let anybody tell you anything different!
Ann P.
Original message:
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
Een I was in comfuter training, I asked my teacher to teach me the VersaBraille. I thought that was the greatest thing when I saw a braille display word processor. She told me that I could not learn it and that I was not as smart as the student that was presently learning it. That is no teacher. A teachg that discourages someone when they show an interest, is not a true teacher. They are lazn. That other person was very highly esteemed. But they walked off their job without notifying anyone, and got someone in the family way. `you still estemmed them. They trashed me because of health issues. They did not like me and they did not want to see me get ahead. They did not want to help me, because they felt that I would be an embarrassment to them and ruin their reputation by becoming ill and needing to be off the job or leave the job because of my health. I got so depressed about being degraded and bullied, and verbally abused, that after ssx months of that, I left the program for professional psychiatric help. The teacher was very mean. She jd tell me that my Seeing Eye dog was going to die. Even the other student yelled at her for that. Then when I left the program, my state counselor in Phily imitated her and did the same verbal abuse and degradation. I moved away from Phily, because I knew that they would not change my counselor, because the next one would have followed suit. What a relief it was to move away. I can feel for Brian. I know what that is like. So I got my very own VersaBraille through a state grant. I learned how to use it in one night after staying up all night and reading the 3 volume braille manual of instructions. I used it constantly. Then I went on to the Braille Lite. Then the BrailleNote. Then the U2 Mini. The Orbit Reader 20 is on the way. I am watching the masl for it. Eventually I will get the BrailleMe, also. That is how dumb that I am. Thank you for your kind time.
|
|
locked
Re: warning if you doing business
Hi all, Excuse me. Teachers and parents who do this for kids who have learning differences are indeed doing their children a disservice. That's why the modern term is learning differences, not disabilities. This means that they learn in a different way. Some people have an inability to read because the pathways from their eyes or fingers to the brain are munged. That doesn't mean they are less intelligent, indeed, those with dyslexia are often gifted students. The problem isn't with the student, it's with the teacher. A true teacher will be able to accommodate someone with a learning difference. It is the teacher that has to change methods, not the student. It is a shame that often these diagnoses cause both kids and adults to be labeled and less is expected of them. Education often doesn't serve those who learn differently because everyone is forced into the same mode. Most students have no problem with this but sometimes there are students who need to follow a different path. Ann P. -- Ann K. Parsons Portal Tutoring EMAIL: akp@sero.email Author of The Demmies: http://www.dldbooks.com/annparsons/Portal Tutoring web site: http://www.portaltutoring.infoSkype: Putertutor "All that is gold does not glitter, Not all those who wander are lost."
|
|
Re: firefox portable or full
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Saturday, March 7, 2020 10:58
PM
Subject: Re: [TechTalk] firefox portable
or full
The page to download Firefox portable
is:
There may be something on the page about
downloading the portable apps installer but don't worry about that.
I believe you should use the link that says
something like
Download from PortableApps.com
Its been a long time but I
believe that is the link to use.
Gene
----- Original Message
-----
Sent: Saturday, March 07, 2020 7:26 PM
Subject: [TechTalk] firefox portable or full
guys can anyone or jene share again
thanks
|
|
locked
Re: warning if you doing business
That's terrible. I don't tolerate people answering questions on my behave. It's funny how family can be the worst offenders.
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
-----Original Message----- From: main@TechTalk.groups.io <main@TechTalk.groups.io> On Behalf Of jan howells via Groups.Io Sent: March 7, 2020 10:37 PM To: main@TechTalk.groups.io Subject: Re: [TechTalk] warning if you doing business
I always told by family members that I am dumb, stupid, and incompetent. I had no self esteem. My family still thinks that because I cannot see. I was always degraded by my family. My aunt got hollered at by the Seeing Eye. She cried and blamed me. I did not tell her to degrade in front of them and answer questions during my interview at the same time while I was answering my questions. That was very awkward and embarrassing.
Jan
|
|
locked
Re: warning if you doing business
It’s an interesting conversation. We should probably change the subject line as it no longer reflects it’s original intention.
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
From: main@TechTalk.groups.io <main@TechTalk.groups.io> On Behalf Of Gene Sent: March 7, 2020 10:21 PM To: main@TechTalk.groups.io Subject: Re: [TechTalk] warning if you doing business I thought that letting conversation move beyond what is typical of such lists as this might build community. I'm pleased to read your message. I will say that I'm not sure how long to let the discussion continue. I'll partly use comments from list members to help me decide. I've received almost no complaints so far so it appears that members are interested in having the discussion continue. This is new territory for this list and for me on any such lists I've been a member of. ----- Original Message ----- Sent: Saturday, March 07, 2020 7:58 PM Subject: Re: [TechTalk] warning if you doing business Een I was in comfuter training, I asked my teacher to teach me the VersaBraille. I thought that was the greatest thing when I saw a braille display word processor. She told me that I could not learn it and that I was not as smart as the student that was presently learning it. That is no teacher. A teachg that discourages someone when they show an interest, is not a true teacher. They are lazn. That other person was very highly esteemed. But they walked off their job without notifying anyone, and got someone in the family way. `you still estemmed them. They trashed me because of health issues. They did not like me and they did not want to see me get ahead. They did not want to help me, because they felt that I would be an embarrassment to them and ruin their reputation by becoming ill and needing to be off the job or leave the job because of my health. I got so depressed about being degraded and bullied, and verbally abused, that after ssx months of that, I left the program for professional psychiatric help. The teacher was very mean. She jd tell me that my Seeing Eye dog was going to die. Even the other student yelled at her for that. Then when I left the program, my state counselor in Phily imitated her and did the same verbal abuse and degradation. I moved away from Phily, because I knew that they would not change my counselor, because the next one would have followed suit. What a relief it was to move away. I can feel for Brian. I know what that is like. So I got my very own VersaBraille through a state grant. I learned how to use it in one night after staying up all night and reading the 3 volume braille manual of instructions. I used it constantly. Then I went on to the Braille Lite. Then the BrailleNote. Then the U2 Mini. The Orbit Reader 20 is on the way. I am watching the masl for it. Eventually I will get the BrailleMe, also. That is how dumb that I am. Thank you for your kind time.
|
|
locked
Re: warning if you doing business
It does seem to be the case. I’m 53 as of yesterday. When I attended the school for the blind in Halifax there were a few, not all that many children with other disabilities. I suppose it could be that these kids were just kept away from school back then and we rarely saw them, but today we are definitely seeing more and more people with other needs.
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
From: main@TechTalk.groups.io <main@TechTalk.groups.io> On Behalf Of Gene Sent: March 7, 2020 10:13 PM To: main@TechTalk.groups.io Subject: Re: [TechTalk] warning if you doing business That's an interesting observation. I am of the generation where blindness was mostly caused by giving too much oxygen to premature babies. I was told years ago that more children are born now who are blind and have other problems. Whether this is true or not, I wonder if many who work with blind children now are taught to look for such additional problems and overdiagnose them. ----- Original Message ----- Sent: Saturday, March 07, 2020 7:49 PM Subject: Re: [TechTalk] warning if you doing business Hi Gene,
I read Brian's heartfelt response just before I read your response to Ann. Now we can only go by what Brian is saying and as with everyone else, I wasn't there when all these things were done to him. Assuming that what he says is largely true, his situation seems to be more and more prevalent with blind people.
For example, I know a woman whose teachers determined that she was learning disabled when she was about five years old. From that time on, she was always told that she couldn't do this or couldn't do that and so on. To add to this, her parents were over protective and added to the issue. By the time I met her, she had become some what resigned to the fact that she couldn't do a lot of things--and in particular, she couldn't use a computer with the same ability of a normal blind person. After working with her for about six months, I was able to teacher a significant amount. I don't think she had any real learning disability. She was just conditioned to accept less someone else said about her true potential.
I knew another man who was diagnosed as profoundly mentally disabled. When I first met him, he was working in a sheltered workshop. Just talking to him, I did not think that he was in any form mentally challenged. So just on a whim, I started teaching him basic computer skills. He took to it like the proverbial duck to water. He now runs a number of distribution lists and is a member of the JAWS public beta team and the NVDA devlopment team.
So much for expert diagnosis of 'the blind.'
On 3/7/2020 6:33 PM, Gene wrote: It is far more useful to discuss possible ways of improving the situation rather than, and I'm sorry if you object, labeling someone with no real diagnostic work. If you label someone by saying he or she has different learning styles, what does that do? It implies that the rest of us who don't can do nothing to hhelp. And you are medicalizing a problem that may simply be largely someone rushing when he becomes emotionally involved in a discussion. I've seen many messages from Brian and I've seen many much better written ones. I simply do not believe you can diagnose some sort of problem by reading some e-mails, especially when more plausible explanations exist based on the number of much better written messages I've seen. I am trying to help by discussing the matter and not ;labeling or diagnosing. I'm using what I have observed. You are defending, labeling, and medicalizing a problem when there are other just as plausible or more plausible explanations. Ours is an age of medicalizing everything. If you rush to medicalize, you take attempts to help out of the hands of us mere mortals. it must be done by specialists. If I were convinced that there were some medical problem in this case, I might defer to the specialists. You haven't even begun to prove your contention. I'm sorry if you are offended and don't like what I've written. I'm not serving anyone if I don't honestly write what I think. Brian has sent a message saying that people on lists have told him to use a spell checker and asking about where to get one. That indicates that Brian wants to improve. I'm willing to help and I think a lot of others are as well. and I think you are as well. I believe that in a situation like this, you try to help by trying to solve problems in a practical way. One way is to find out what e-mail prohgram Brian is using. We can proceed from there. ----- Original Message ----- Sent: Saturday, March 07, 2020 3:35 PM Subject: Re: [TechTalk] warning if you doing business Hi all,
No, I am not making unsupported statements. First, after being a tutor to both sighted and blind students in English and in Social Studies, as well as in braille and adaptive computers, since 1978, I'm well acquainted with the signs of writing by persons who have learning differences. They are similar to the ways people who are DeafBlind write, so I wasn't sure which we're dealing with. Hmmm, let me see, 1978 was forty-two years ago now. Good Lord, that's a lot of experience! I'm still tutoring.
Although he may be rushing to write his responses, his writing has been consistent during the time I've observed him on various lists. This is not a single occurrance.
As for the coasting, he admits it himself in his message. He said that his teachers never told him his writing was less than adequate. That, Gene, my friend, is the behavior of teachers who allow PWD to coast through school.
If you want to check out my creds, you can look at my web site below. On there is a link called Instructor. Have a look.
Ann P.
Original message: > You are making unsupported statements. How do you know Brian has > learning differences? How do you know he was coasted through school? > I'll offer an alternative explanation. I'm not saying either are > correct nor am I saying which one may or may not account for observed > phenomena better. But how do you know that some or many of these errors > are not the result of someone feeling strongly about something and > rushing to get the message written as quickly as possible? If Brian is > typing far above the speed at which he types more accurately, that may > result in some of what is observed. And, since I've seen messages from > Brian that don't have all these mistakes, I'll consider my theory to be > a possibly better explanation, since I don't know Brian's background > and I think it is absurd to infer some sort of learning differences > based on a few e-mails. > But none of this, learning differences, spelling difficulties, a rush > to type as quickly as you can to get your message out as fast as > possible, none of these possibilities precludes the use of a spell checker. > To this point, I have been writing as a list member. I am now writing > as the list owner. > This discussion has been very interesting and we know more about each > other than we did, thus helping build community on the list. But if the > discussion becomes mostly one of how messages are written, I'll close > it. I realize that you and a few others may want to respond to what I > and others have said but this part of the discussion shouldn't continue > for more than a few more messages. > Now, I'm writing as a list member again. > Brian, I would think it may be uncomfortable seeing your writing > critiqued. But keep these things in mind and you may find the > experience useful: > My view is that if I expect someone to spend the time reading my > messages and thinking about them, I have a certain responsibility to > make them reasonably readable. In your case, many people probably have > to stop to review phrases where words are written together without > spaces. Because I've seen messages from you that are much better > written, it appears to me that if you get emotional about a subject, > you rush to write what you want as quickly as you can. the result is > errors that make your messages difficult to read, such as words written > together with no spaces. > As to spelling, in general I would just let that go. But when you call > a whole class of people illiterate, then don't use a spellchecker and > have misspelled wordafter misspelled word, then, like it or not, you > become part of the discussion. Like it or not, literacy is partly > sending a message without perhaps thirty or forty or more misspelled > words. And nothing precludes you from using a spellchecker. As I said, > in general I wouldn't comment on spelling, but it is inevitable that at > least a few people will when you accuse people of being illiterate and > don't use a spell checker, resulting in a great many misspellings. It's > as though I attended a cooking contest, made a speech before the event > in which I said that with frozen dinners, no one knows how to cook > anymore, then I burned the soup and my main dish. > Gene > ----- Original Message ----- > From: Ann Parsons <mailto:akp@...> > Sent: Saturday, March 07, 2020 6:27 AM > To: main@techtalk.groups.io <mailto:main@techtalk.groups.io> > Subject: Re: [TechTalk] warning if you doing business > Hi all,
> I could write a long rant about how I am treated when I correct > people's spelling publicly. I have been called harsh and arrogant and > more. I won't do that because it would be counter-productive. I will > say, however, that taking advantage of someone who has made a public > mistake is, I feel, cruel. it demeans those who perpetuate such crimes.
> If you wish to correct Brian's writing, you might do so privately, > thereby giving him the dignity he deserves. It isn't his fault that he > was coasted through school. It isn't his fault that he may not have a > braille display or possess hard copy braille so that he could improve > his writing.
> If you want to help, take it off-list! Truly be of service and not > part of the problem.
> Ann P.
> Original message: >> Now Brian,
>> I don't want to personalize this, but you say you're a good >> Braille reader now: correct? You say that people who use audio >> primarily aren't truly literate and you can tell by the way they write >> e-mails: is that what you're saying? Well let me be your teacher and >> quote and correct your own mistakes that you have made in your lengthy >> reply.
>> <spelling error> aAmen(I guess you are trying to say Amen to that or >> something similar--note the repetition of the first letter A.)
>> <grammatical clumsiness> if you don't braille than you are not truly >> literate. (I guess you mean: if you don't know/use/are competent in, >> Braille then you are not truly literate.)
>> <run on sentence> If you doubt this then read emails from blind people >> who don't know braille there spelling and (There should be a period >> after the word Braille.)
>> <spelling error> gramar and punctuation leave alot to be desired. (In >> this sentence grammar and a lot are misspelled.)
>> <run on sentence> I have been there myself if I don't read then I to >> will fall in to trap as well. (There should be a period after the word >> myself.)
>> If you truly want to be literate then you just have >> <spelling error> toread and not just listen to audio. (there is a run >> on word toread that should be separated into 'to read.') >> Those of us who do prefer braille and would rather read than listen >> have only audio as the option all to often. For me if I want to stay >> literate then I have to read braille and as I said in my email to Grumpy >> Dave I can't >> <spelling error> amagine my life with out braille. (I guess you mean >> 'imagine my life without Braille.)
>> <wrong use of the word loose> I have had braille most of my life and I >> would loose independence (I guess you mean lose independence.)
>> <spelling error> ifI were to not know braille. (You ran the words If >> and I together.)
>> Reading braille is active reading but listening to audio or computer >> speech is just passive reading.
>> I prefer to <spelling error> activly read but most of the time I can't >> because it's audio only. (You misspelled actively.)
>> <spelling errors and a run on sentence> I do rember haveing to cary >> volumes of braille books acrost campus at the blind school but I never >> gave it a though it was just what I hav to do it was no problem for me >> at all. (You misspelled remember, having, across and probably mean the >> word had when you wrote hav. And I almost forgot, you used the word >> though instead of thought.) (There should be a period after the word >> thought.)
>> The campus at the Michigan school for the blind in Lansing Michigan >> covered a 4 city block area. I tried college back in 1987-1988 and I >> could have >> <spelling error> donee much better if I had braille. (You misspelled >> the word done.)
>> <spelling errors> I had tapes from recording forthe blind but I had >> issues with the readers with pronouncations. (you ran the words for >> and the together. You misspelled pronunciation.)
>> I remember taking test and what I heard during the test sounded nothing >> like what I heard on the tapes.
>> If I would have had my books in braille I would have known the correct >> words and the tests would have made <spelling error> sinse. (You >> misspelled the word sense.)
>> <spelling error> If yur going to read on tape then you must be able to >> speak properly and say your words properly. (You misspelled the word >> you're--or at least I think that's what you meant by writing the word yur.)
>> <grammatical oddity> There was the issue of only tape at a time and >> having to send 2 copies of every book to recording for the blind to be >> recorded. (I'm not quite sure, but I think you meant 'only one tape at >> a time.)
>> <spelling error> Audio is usless if I don't know what you are saying. >> (You misspelled useless.)
>> This is why we need braille. Braille readers don't make a big deal of >> how many volumes a book is it just is.
>> LONG STORY SHORT: BRIAN, YOU ARE A POOR EXAMPLE OF THE IDEA THAT BRAILLE >> READERS WRITE COHERENT AND GRAMATICALLY CORRECT E-MAIL MESSAGES. >> On 3/6/2020 3:01 PM, brian wrote: >>> aAmen if you don't braille than you are not truly literate. If you >>> doubt this then read emails from blind people who don't know braille >>> there spelling and gramar and punctuation leave alot to be desired. I >>> have been there myself if I don't read then I to will fall in to trap >>> as well. If you truly want to be literate then you just have toread >>> and not just listen to audio. Those of us who do prefer braille and >>> would rather read than listen have only audio as the option all to >>> often. For me if I want to stay literate then I have to read braille >>> and as I said in my email to Grumpy Dave I can't amagine my life with >>> out braille. I have had braille most of my life and I would loose >>> independence ifI were to not know braille. Reading braille is active >>> reading but listening to audio or computer speech is just passive >>> reading. I prefer to activly read but most of the time I can't >>> because it's audio only. I do rember haveing to cary volumes of >>> braille books acrost campus at the blind school but I never gave it a >>> though it was just what I hav to do it was no problem for me at all. >>> The campus at the Michigan school for the blind in Lansing Michigan >>> covered a 4 city block area. I tried college back in 1987-1988 and I >>> could have donee much better if I had braille. I had tapes from >>> recording forthe blind but I had issues with the readers with >>> pronouncations. I remember taking test and what I heard during the >>> test sounded nothing like what I heard on the tapes. If I would have >>> had my books in braille I would have known the correct words and the >>> tests would have made sinse. If yur going to read on tape then you >>> must be able to speak properly and say your words properly. There was >>> the issue of only tape at a time and having to send 2 copies of every >>> book to recording for the blind to be recorded. Audio is usless if I >>> don't know what you are saying. This is why we need braille. Braille >>> readers don't make a big deal of how many volumes a book is it just is.
>>> Brian Sackrider
>>> On 3/6/2020 7:26 AM, chris judge wrote: >>>> This is true. There is a huge difference between not learning braille >>>> if you've lost your site later in life. The unfortunate fact is that >>>> even people who are blind since birth are not learning braille at the >>>> rate they were when I was a kid 50 years ago. If you are blind since >>>> birth and you don't learn braille you miss out on basic literacy. How >>>> do you learn proper spelling, grammar, punctuation and such if you >>>> don't learn braile. If you have had site you already understand these >>>> things so knowing braille isn't as paramount.
>>>> -----Original Message----- >>>> From: main@TechTalk.groups.io <mailto:main@TechTalk.groups.io> >>>> <main@TechTalk.groups.io <mailto:main@TechTalk.groups.io>> On Behalf Of >>>> Victor >>>> Sent: March 6, 2020 12:42 AM >>>> To: main@techtalk.groups.io <mailto:main@techtalk.groups.io> >>>> Subject: Re: [TechTalk] warning if you doing business
>>>> Hello everyone:
>>>> I would like to point out that many blind people lose their eyesight >>>> later in life and they find it too difficult to learn braille. It is >>>> much easier for them to access information by listening to audio. >>>> It’s hard enough for them to get over losing their eyesight and live >>>> without seeing their loved ones or other things ever again. The last >>>> thing they want is to learn a new skill that they may find just too >>>> difficult.
>>>> After obtaining my iPhone, I attended a users group where are the >>>> people taught each other to use iOS devices. While at the group one >>>> day, one of the group leaders brought a focus 40 refreshable braille >>>> display for everyone to examine. I was the only blind person in the >>>> room interested in touching the device because I knew braille and I >>>> owned a previous generation of that device. It was not discussed, but >>>> I knew that they were not interested because most of them had lost >>>> their eyesight later in life. I suspect that they found it much >>>> easier to listen to audio than reading braille. Plus, most of them >>>> had learned how to access information using their iPhones. I’m sure >>>> they found it much easier to whip out their iPhones and listen to >>>> their books, podcasts, scan documents and do everything else we can >>>> do with our iPhones. I realize that not everyone owns a smart phone >>>> because they have not found a way to obtain one. I also realize that >>>> not everyone is into these types of gadgets. However, many blind >>>> people have discovered how great these gadgets are and how useful >>>> they can be in helping them become more independent. For many of us, >>>> that is the route we have chosen.
>>>> In any case, don’t be too surprised if you meet a blind person who is >>>> not interested in learning braille. Don’t be too hard on those >>>> people. Maybe they just prefer to do what is easier.
>>>> I am so glad that refreshable braille displays exist now. I am also >>>> glad that low cost refreshable braille displays are being developed. >>>> I definitely don’t miss the days of carrying bulky braille books to >>>> and from my classes. I do not miss the days of trying to look up >>>> words in the dictionary and dealing with a whole bookshelf of braille >>>> books. No thank you! I do not miss my five volume braille New Testament.
>>>> If I did not already on a refreshable braille display, I would >>>> definitely look into obtaining the orbit braille reader or the >>>> braille me.
>>>> Anyhow, these are just my rambling opinions.
>>>> Victor Sent from my iPhone
>>>>> On Mar 5, 2020, at 7:40 PM, brian <bsackrider55@... >>>>> <mailto:bsackrider55@...>> wrote:
>>>>> Thanks Grumpy Dave for your explination. I would be willing to >>>>> pay a few dollars to get braille. I am not saying that I should get >>>>> for free but not to have the option is my complaint. My local >>>>> liberary use to provide braille for 10 cents per page. I was also >>>>> told that if I provided the paper they would braille what I wanted. >>>>> They required 67 weight paper which I can get at Staples. All to >>>>> often we are forced to except only audio as the only format that is >>>>> available. Braille will always be my prefered format because I >>>>> prefer to read for myself instead of just listen. You say that you >>>>> hate braille but you can use it well I feel the same about audio. >>>>> Why do we have to be locked in to just one format? How many people >>>>> would rather read than listen? Blind or sighted. People who prefer >>>>> to read than should be commended instead of being kind of bashed for >>>>> it. If not many blind people request braille than it should be no >>>>> trouble to provide it. Braille is not that dificult to produce once >>>>> you have the equipment. my liberary had no trouble all they needed >>>>> was files in microsoft word and the paper and they were good to go. >>>>> I use to get my weekly meterials for my church all in grade 2 >>>>> braille. It was really great to finally be an active participant in >>>>> the service instead just a pasive listener. To be able to read >>>>> along with everyone else the verses and hyms and classes lessons is >>>>> a great feeling you just can't discribe the independence that it >>>>> givesyou. It's kind of like having access to dvs you can finally >>>>> know what is going on when there is all of that dead air. I was >>>>> able to read infront of the church and be active in bible study and >>>>> even lead the groop all using braille. I do use braille menus when >>>>> ever possible even if I don't really need it just to let them see >>>>> that somone is acually using it. Braille has given me a very full >>>>> life and I don't know whear my life would be with out braille. I >>>>> feel that every blind person who is able to read braille should >>>>> learn it. I do understand that there are blind people who have >>>>> medical conditions that prevents them from being able to read >>>>> braille. For them they have no choice but to use audio but I do >>>>> have the choice I just don't like being limited to just audio only >>>>> and not braille. You hate braille and I hate audio. a good example >>>>> of when I wish that I had braille instead of a file was when I >>>>> requested my local newspaper to be accessable. my lions club >>>>> purchassed a sara reading machine for me there was no braille manual >>>>> but there was a print manual. I had to go to the help file on the >>>>> machine and try to find what I wanted. When I called the paper >>>>> office they asked what files my machine could read. If I had a >>>>> braille manual I could have just looked it up while on the phone and >>>>> gave them the answer. I had to call back after I went to the help >>>>> file and found it. This is very time concuming I can look up >>>>> somthing much faster in braille than any other format. I am not >>>>> saying that I can do it as quick as a sighted person can with print >>>>> but for me it's the fastest way for me to get the job done. When I >>>>> was a kid I attended the Michigan school the blind in Lansing and we >>>>> had to learn braille and all of our books were in braille. There >>>>> was no I don't want to learn it you had to. I will say that I can >>>>> certainly listen much faster than I can read but when it comes to >>>>> looking up somthing braille is faster hands down. I have been blind >>>>> since birth and thats all I ever knew was braille. It's like the >>>>> sighted grew up with print. I wanted to learn the opticon at the >>>>> rehab center but they would not let me because they said that I was >>>>> not fast enough. I felt that I was learning and making progress and >>>>> I should had the right to continue but they said no. If somone >>>>> really wants to learn a new skil then they should beallowed to do >>>>> so. If I am determind to learn somthing that then I will even >>>>> though it might take more time then the teacher would like. I guess >>>>> that modavation means nothing. If somone reallly wants to learn >>>>> braille so what ifit takes several month to do so they should not be >>>>> told no you can't continue. If companies had the equipment to >>>>> produce braille they could charge me for the cost of the paper to >>>>> get braille manuals or catalogs.
>>>>>> On 3/5/2020 9:26 PM, Dave wrote: >>>>>> Hello Brian,
>>>>>> I have nothing against Braille other than the hassle it is to create >>>>>> it, such as a Manual in Braille.
>>>>>> I've been blind for a long time now, and there were many times when I >>>>>> would have Kissed the Feet of anyone who gave me a manual in Audio >>>>>> format. many times have I had to just Wing it, learning by Guess and >>>>>> by Golly. Once Computers became a Tool for the Blind, Guessing was >>>>>> not always the best thing to do, as guessing wrong could ruin your >>>>>> day in a Big way. Still can.
>>>>>> but, Brian, I have no Beef with Braille. To produce it is just >>>>>> not an >>>>>> easy task. And I would guess that most manufacturers of items for >>>>>> the blind, may not want to hire another Staff member to do nothing >>>>>> but print out Manuals in Braille.
>>>>>> Yes, it all sounds good, until the costs of doing such a thing is >>>>>> considered.
>>>>>> These days, I do expect a Manual at least in a PDF format, if not an >>>>>> Audio file. And if I own my own Braille Printer, I can then print >>>>>> out the PDF file.
>>>>>> Although, I can't afford one of those printers, so I do without.
>>>>>> However, I could run the Audio file through an Audio to Text >>>>>> converter, and then print that file out in Braille.
>>>>>> When I get nothing but an On Line Manual, where I need to go On Line >>>>>> to read the thing. I am Thankful for at least that much, but I >>>>>> always look to see if I can just download the manual so I don't need >>>>>> to be going On Line so much.
>>>>>> Call it my personal Taste.
>>>>>> I would think most who are Blind have learned over and over again to >>>>>> look for Work Arounds for doing many things in Life.
>>>>>> You like Braille, and while I do use it, I Hate it. So a Braille >>>>>> Manual would be a waste of resources to send me one.
>>>>>> You Love it, and can use it well. So, when the Company doesn't send >>>>>> a manual in Braille, but has sent you one in PDF, or even Audio, if >>>>>> you want a manual in Braille, the Work around is to convert that >>>>>> Audio or >>>>>> PDF file into Braille. And if you are like me, and can't afford a >>>>>> Braille Printer, there are Services that will take your Manual file >>>>>> and make you a manual in Braille.
>>>>>> it may cost you a few dollars, which again is all part of the Life of >>>>>> someone who is Blind. In the past, I have hired Readers to read >>>>>> Manuals on Tape. Paid them $10 for every hour of Recorded material.
>>>>>> I've paid people to read my Mail. This was before smart Phones had >>>>>> built in Cameras and OCR programs. I paid them $10 an hour too. this >>>>>> was back in the 1980's and 90's.
>>>>>> I haven't had to hire anyone for about 20 years now
>>>>>> And Dare I bring up the Quality of Manuals? So often, regardless of >>>>>> what Format it comes in, the information in the thing is totally Nuts! >>>>>> It doesn't make Sense, and you can't tell if it is a Translation of >>>>>> something in Chinese to English, or from Chinese to Spanish and then >>>>>> Russian, and then to English etc.
>>>>>> And some manuals that come in English are so poorly written, lack >>>>>> helpful information and seem to be missing a great deal of actual >>>>>> instructional information and are next to useless in any format.
>>>>>> Grumpy Dave
>> -- >> They Ask Me If I'm Happy; I say Yes. >> They ask: "How Happy are You?" >> I Say: "I'm as happy as a stow away chimpanzee on a banana boat!"
> -- > Ann K. Parsons > Portal Tutoring > EMAIL: akp@... <mailto:akp@...> > Author of The Demmies: http://www.dldbooks.com/annparsons/ > <http://www.dldbooks.com/annparsons/> > Portal Tutoring web site: http://www.portaltutoring.info > <http://www.portaltutoring.info> > Skype: Putertutor
> "All that is gold does not glitter, > Not all those who wander are lost."
>
-- Ann K. Parsons Portal Tutoring EMAIL: akp@... Author of The Demmies: http://www.dldbooks.com/annparsons/ Portal Tutoring web site: http://www.portaltutoring.info Skype: Putertutor
"All that is gold does not glitter, Not all those who wander are lost."
-- They Ask Me If I'm Happy; I say Yes. They ask: "How Happy are You?" I Say: "I'm as happy as a stow away chimpanzee on a banana boat!"
|
|
Thunderbird has a spell checker. If you want
to use it differently than Ron has described, in other words, run it after you
have finished your message and not have words flagged as you type, I can
describe how to use it. But before I do, my copy of Thunderbird is very
old, before the Quantum versions came out. Is the spell checker the
same?
Gene
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Sunday, March 08, 2020 7:01 AM
Subject: Re: [TechTalk] spell checker
I believe
thunderbird has a spell checker. I don’t have thunderbird but I’m sure some kind
soul on this list can give you a hand with it.
I use thunderbird for my email.
Brian Sackrider
On 3/7/2020 5:41 PM, Gene wrote:
What e-mail program
are you using or are you using a webmail
interface?
----- Original
Message -----
Sent:
Saturday, March 07, 2020 12:53 PM
Subject:
[TechTalk] spell checker
People on this
list and on other lists have told me to use a spell checker and thats all they
say. They did not give me any options or tell me whear to get oneor how
to use one. I don't have microsoft office. What is a good spell
checker that works with nvda? Just telling me what I should do but not
providing with out anyhelp information does me no good and is not helping me
at all. I have not taken any computer classes what I know I have learned
on my own. It seems that people are all to willing to tell me what I
should do but don't give any helpful sugestions. I know that I do need
help and I do want to make mymessages more readable. It's not that I
don't care I just don't know what to do about the problem. It is true
that if I write to fast than I will make lots of mistakes. The same is
true if I write in braille. I do get very slopy if I write to
fast.
Brian Sackrider
On 3/7/2020 12:13 PM, Gene wrote:
You are making
unsupported statements. How do you know Brian has learning
differences? How do you know he was coasted through school? I'll
offer an alternative explanation. I'm not saying either are correct
nor am I saying which one may or may not account for observed phenomena
better. But how do you know that some or many of these errors are not
the result of someone feeling strongly about something and rushing to get
the message written as quickly as possible? If Brian is typing far
above the speed at which he types more accurately, that may result in some
of what is observed. And, since I've seen messages from Brian that
don't have all these mistakes, I'll consider my theory to be a possibly
better explanation, since I don't know Brian's background and I think it is
absurd to infer some sort of learning differences based on a few
e-mails.
But none of this,
learning differences, spelling difficulties, a rush to type as quickly as
you can to get your message out as fast as possible, none of these
possibilities precludes the use of a spell checker.
To this point, I
have been writing as a list member. I am now writing as the list
owner.
This discussion has
been very interesting and we know more about each other than we did, thus
helping build community on the list. But if the discussion becomes
mostly one of how messages are written, I'll close it. I realize that
you and a few others may want to respond to what I and others have said but
this part of the discussion shouldn't continue for more than a few more
messages.
Now, I'm writing as
a list member again.
Brian, I would
think it may be uncomfortable seeing your writing critiqued. But keep
these things in mind and you may find the experience
useful:
My view is that if
I expect someone to spend the time reading my messages and thinking about
them, I have a certain responsibility to make them reasonably
readable. In your case, many people probably have to stop to
review phrases where words are written together without spaces.
Because I've seen messages from you that are much better written, it appears
to me that if you get emotional about a subject, you rush to write what you
want as quickly as you can. the result is errors that make your
messages difficult to read, such as words written together with no
spaces.
As to
spelling, in general I would just let that go. But when you call
a whole class of people illiterate, then don't use a spellchecker and have
misspelled wordafter misspelled word, then, like it or not, you become
part of the discussion. Like it or not, literacy is partly sending a
message without perhaps thirty or forty or more misspelled words. And
nothing precludes you from using a spellchecker. As I said, in general
I wouldn't comment on spelling, but it is inevitable that at least a few
people will when you accuse people of being illiterate and don't use a spell
checker, resulting in a great many misspellings. It's as though I
attended a cooking contest, made a speech before the event in which I said
that with frozen dinners, no one knows how to cook anymore, then I burned
the soup and my main dish.
----- Original
Message -----
Sent:
Saturday, March 07, 2020 6:27 AM
Subject: Re:
[TechTalk] warning if you doing business
Hi all,
I could write
a long rant about how I am treated when I correct people's spelling
publicly. I have been called harsh and arrogant and more. I
won't do that because it would be counter-productive. I will say,
however, that taking advantage of someone who has made a public mistake
is, I feel, cruel. it demeans those who perpetuate such
crimes.
If you wish to correct Brian's writing, you might do so
privately, thereby giving him the dignity he deserves. It isn't
his fault that he was coasted through school. It isn't his fault
that he may not have a braille display or possess hard copy braille so
that he could improve his writing.
If you want to help, take it
off-list! Truly be of service and not part of the
problem.
Ann P.
Original message: > Now
Brian,
> I don't want to personalize this, but you say you're a
good > Braille reader now: correct? You say that people who use
audio > primarily aren't truly literate and you can tell by the way
they write > e-mails: is that what you're saying? Well let me be
your teacher and > quote and correct your own mistakes that you have
made in your lengthy > reply.
> <spelling error>
aAmen(I guess you are trying to say Amen to that or >
something similar--note the repetition of the first letter A.)
>
<grammatical clumsiness> if you don't braille than you are not
truly > literate. (I guess you mean: if you don't know/use/are
competent in, > Braille then you are not truly literate.)
>
<run on sentence> If you doubt this then read emails from blind
people > who don't know braille there spelling and (There should be a
period > after the word Braille.)
> <spelling error>
gramar and punctuation leave alot to be desired. (In > this
sentence grammar and a lot are misspelled.)
> <run on
sentence> I have been there myself if I don't read then I to > will
fall in to trap as well. (There should be a period after the
word > myself.)
> If you truly want to be literate then you
just have > <spelling error> toread and not just listen to
audio. (there is a run > on word toread that should be separated
into 'to read.') > Those of us who do prefer braille and would
rather read than listen > have only audio as the option all to often.
For me if I want to stay > literate then I have to read braille and as
I said in my email to Grumpy > Dave I can't > <spelling
error> amagine my life with out braille. (I guess you mean >
'imagine my life without Braille.)
> <wrong use of the word
loose> I have had braille most of my life and I > would loose
independence (I guess you mean lose independence.)
> <spelling
error> ifI were to not know braille. (You ran the words
If > and I together.)
> Reading braille is active reading
but listening to audio or computer > speech is just passive
reading.
> I prefer to <spelling error> activly read but
most of the time I can't > because it's audio only. (You
misspelled actively.)
> <spelling errors and a run on
sentence> I do rember haveing to cary > volumes of braille books
acrost campus at the blind school but I never > gave it a though it
was just what I hav to do it was no problem for me > at
all. (You misspelled remember, having, across and probably mean
the > word had when you wrote hav. And I almost forgot, you used the
word > though instead of thought.) (There should be a period
after the word > thought.)
> The campus at the Michigan
school for the blind in Lansing Michigan > covered a 4 city block
area. I tried college back in 1987-1988 and I > could
have > <spelling error> donee much better if I had
braille. (You misspelled > the word done.)
>
<spelling errors> I had tapes from recording forthe blind but I
had > issues with the readers with pronouncations. (you
ran the words for > and the together. You misspelled
pronunciation.)
> I remember taking test and what I heard during
the test sounded nothing > like what I heard on the tapes.
>
If I would have had my books in braille I would have known the
correct > words and the tests would have made <spelling error>
sinse. (You > misspelled the word sense.)
>
<spelling error> If yur going to read on tape then you must be able
to > speak properly and say your words properly. (You
misspelled the word > you're--or at least I think that's what you
meant by writing the word yur.)
> <grammatical oddity> There
was the issue of only tape at a time and > having to send 2 copies of
every book to recording for the blind to be > recorded. (I'm not
quite sure, but I think you meant 'only one tape at > a
time.)
> <spelling error> Audio is usless if I don't know
what you are saying. > (You misspelled useless.)
> This is
why we need braille. Braille readers don't make a big deal of >
how many volumes a book is it just is.
> LONG STORY SHORT:
BRIAN, YOU ARE A POOR EXAMPLE OF THE IDEA THAT BRAILLE > READERS WRITE
COHERENT AND GRAMATICALLY CORRECT E-MAIL MESSAGES. > On 3/6/2020 3:01
PM, brian wrote: >> aAmen if you don't braille than you are not
truly literate. If you >> doubt this then read emails from blind
people who don't know braille >> there spelling and gramar and
punctuation leave alot to be desired. I >> have been there
myself if I don't read then I to will fall in to trap >> as
well. If you truly want to be literate then you just have
toread >> and not just listen to audio. Those of us who
do prefer braille and >> would rather read than listen have only
audio as the option all to >> often. For me if I want to stay
literate then I have to read braille >> and as I said in my email
to Grumpy Dave I can't amagine my life with >> out braille. I
have had braille most of my life and I would loose >> independence
ifI were to not know braille. Reading braille is active >>
reading but listening to audio or computer speech is just
passive >> reading. I prefer to activly read but most of the
time I can't >> because it's audio only. I do rember haveing
to cary volumes of >> braille books acrost campus at the blind
school but I never gave it a >> though it was just what I hav to do
it was no problem for me at all. >> The campus at the Michigan
school for the blind in Lansing Michigan >> covered a 4 city block
area. I tried college back in 1987-1988 and I >> could have
donee much better if I had braille. I had tapes from >>
recording forthe blind but I had issues with the readers with >>
pronouncations. I remember taking test and what I heard during
the >> test sounded nothing like what I heard on the tapes.
If I would have >> had my books in braille I would have known the
correct words and the >> tests would have made sinse. If yur
going to read on tape then you >> must be able to speak properly
and say your words properly. There was >> the issue of only
tape at a time and having to send 2 copies of every >> book to
recording for the blind to be recorded. Audio is usless if
I >> don't know what you are saying. This is why we need
braille. Braille >> readers don't make a big deal of how many
volumes a book is it just is.
>> Brian
Sackrider
>> On 3/6/2020 7:26 AM, chris judge
wrote: >>> This is true. There is a huge difference between not
learning braille >>> if you've lost your site later in life. The
unfortunate fact is that >>> even people who are blind since
birth are not learning braille at the >>> rate they were when I
was a kid 50 years ago. If you are blind since >>> birth and you
don't learn braille you miss out on basic literacy. How >>> do
you learn proper spelling, grammar, punctuation and such if
you >>> don't learn braile. If you have had site you already
understand these >>> things so knowing braille isn't as
paramount.
>>> -----Original Message----- >>>
From: main@TechTalk.groups.io
<main@TechTalk.groups.io>
On Behalf Of >>> Victor >>> Sent: March 6, 2020
12:42 AM >>> To: main@techtalk.groups.io >>>
Subject: Re: [TechTalk] warning if you doing business
>>>
Hello everyone:
>>> I would like to point out that many
blind people lose their eyesight >>> later in life and they find
it too difficult to learn braille. It is >>> much easier for
them to access information by listening to audio. >>> It’s hard
enough for them to get over losing their eyesight and live >>>
without seeing their loved ones or other things ever again. The
last >>> thing they want is to learn a new skill that they may
find just too >>> difficult.
>>> After obtaining
my iPhone, I attended a users group where are the >>> people
taught each other to use iOS devices. While at the group one >>>
day, one of the group leaders brought a focus 40 refreshable
braille >>> display for everyone to examine. I was the only
blind person in the >>> room interested in touching the device
because I knew braille and I >>> owned a previous generation of
that device. It was not discussed, but >>> I knew that they were
not interested because most of them had lost >>> their eyesight
later in life. I suspect that they found it much >>> easier to
listen to audio than reading braille. Plus, most of them >>> had
learned how to access information using their iPhones. I’m
sure >>> they found it much easier to whip out their iPhones and
listen to >>> their books, podcasts, scan documents and do
everything else we can >>> do with our iPhones. I realize that
not everyone owns a smart phone >>> because they have not found
a way to obtain one. I also realize that >>> not everyone is
into these types of gadgets. However, many blind >>> people have
discovered how great these gadgets are and how useful >>> they
can be in helping them become more independent. For many of
us, >>> that is the route we have chosen.
>>> In
any case, don’t be too surprised if you meet a blind person who
is >>> not interested in learning braille. Don’t be too hard on
those >>> people. Maybe they just prefer to do what is
easier.
>>> I am so glad that refreshable braille displays
exist now. I am also >>> glad that low cost refreshable braille
displays are being developed. >>> I definitely don’t miss the
days of carrying bulky braille books to >>> and from my classes.
I do not miss the days of trying to look up >>> words in the
dictionary and dealing with a whole bookshelf of braille >>>
books. No thank you! I do not miss my five volume braille New
Testament.
>>> If I did not already on a refreshable braille
display, I would >>> definitely look into obtaining the orbit
braille reader or the >>> braille me.
>>>
Anyhow, these are just my rambling opinions.
>>> Victor Sent
from my iPhone
>>>> On Mar 5, 2020, at 7:40 PM, brian
<bsackrider55@...>
wrote:
>>>> Thanks Grumpy Dave for
your explination. I would be willing to >>>> pay a few
dollars to get braille. I am not saying that I should
get >>>> for free but not to have the option is my
complaint. My local >>>> liberary use to provide
braille for 10 cents per page. I was also >>>>
told that if I provided the paper they would braille what I
wanted. >>>> They required 67 weight paper which I can get at
Staples. All to >>>> often we are forced to except only
audio as the only format that is >>>> available. Braille will
always be my prefered format because I >>>> prefer to read
for myself instead of just listen. You say that
you >>>> hate braille but you can use it well I feel the same
about audio. >>>> Why do we have to be locked in to just one
format? How many people >>>> would rather read than
listen? Blind or sighted. People who prefer >>>> to
read than should be commended instead of being kind of bashed
for >>>> it. If not many blind people request braille
than it should be no >>>> trouble to provide it. Braille is
not that dificult to produce once >>>> you have the
equipment. my liberary had no trouble all they
needed >>>> was files in microsoft word and the paper and
they were good to go. >>>> I use to get my weekly meterials
for my church all in grade 2 >>>> braille. It was really
great to finally be an active participant in >>>> the service
instead just a pasive listener. To be able to read >>>>
along with everyone else the verses and hyms and classes lessons
is >>>> a great feeling you just can't discribe the
independence that it >>>> givesyou. It's kind of like
having access to dvs you can finally >>>> know what is going
on when there is all of that dead air. I was >>>> able
to read infront of the church and be active in bible study
and >>>> even lead the groop all using braille. I do
use braille menus when >>>> ever possible even if I don't
really need it just to let them see >>>> that somone is
acually using it. Braille has given me a very full >>>>
life and I don't know whear my life would be with out braille.
I >>>> feel that every blind person who is able to read
braille should >>>> learn it. I do understand that
there are blind people who have >>>> medical conditions that
prevents them from being able to read >>>> braille. For
them they have no choice but to use audio but I do >>>> have
the choice I just don't like being limited to just audio
only >>>> and not braille. You hate braille and I hate
audio. a good example >>>> of when I wish that I had
braille instead of a file was when I >>>> requested my local
newspaper to be accessable. my lions club >>>>
purchassed a sara reading machine for me there was no braille
manual >>>> but there was a print manual. I had to go
to the help file on the >>>> machine and try to find what I
wanted. When I called the paper >>>> office they asked
what files my machine could read. If I had a >>>>
braille manual I could have just looked it up while on the phone
and >>>> gave them the answer. I had to call back after
I went to the help >>>> file and found it. This is very
time concuming I can look up >>>> somthing much faster in
braille than any other format. I am not >>>> saying
that I can do it as quick as a sighted person can with
print >>>> but for me it's the fastest way for me to get the
job done. When I >>>> was a kid I attended the Michigan
school the blind in Lansing and we >>>> had to learn braille
and all of our books were in braille. There >>>> was no
I don't want to learn it you had to. I will say that I
can >>>> certainly listen much faster than I can read but
when it comes to >>>> looking up somthing braille is faster
hands down. I have been blind >>>> since birth and
thats all I ever knew was braille. It's like the >>>> sighted
grew up with print. I wanted to learn the opticon at
the >>>> rehab center but they would not let me because they
said that I was >>>> not fast enough. I felt that I was
learning and making progress and >>>> I should had the right
to continue but they said no. If somone >>>> really wants to
learn a new skil then they should beallowed to do >>>>
so. If I am determind to learn somthing that then I will
even >>>> though it might take more time then the teacher
would like. I guess >>>> that modavation means
nothing. If somone reallly wants to learn >>>> braille
so what ifit takes several month to do so they should not
be >>>> told no you can't continue. If companies had
the equipment to >>>> produce braille they could charge me
for the cost of the paper to >>>> get braille manuals or
catalogs.
>>>>> On 3/5/2020 9:26 PM, Dave
wrote: >>>>> Hello Brian,
>>>>>
I have nothing against Braille other than the hassle it is to
create >>>>> it, such as a Manual in
Braille.
>>>>> I've been blind for a long time
now, and there were many times when I >>>>> would have
Kissed the Feet of anyone who gave me a manual in
Audio >>>>> format. many times have I had to just
Wing it, learning by Guess and >>>>> by Golly. Once
Computers became a Tool for the Blind, Guessing was >>>>>
not always the best thing to do, as guessing wrong could ruin
your >>>>> day in a Big way. Still
can.
>>>>> but, Brian, I have no Beef with
Braille. To produce it is just >>>>> not
an >>>>> easy task. And I would guess that most
manufacturers of items for >>>>> the blind, may not want
to hire another Staff member to do nothing >>>>> but print
out Manuals in Braille.
>>>>> Yes, it all sounds
good, until the costs of doing such a thing is >>>>>
considered.
>>>>> These days, I do expect a Manual
at least in a PDF format, if not an >>>>> Audio
file. And if I own my own Braille Printer, I can then
print >>>>> out the PDF
file.
>>>>> Although, I can't afford one of those
printers, so I do without.
>>>>> However, I
could run the Audio file through an Audio to Text >>>>>
converter, and then print that file out in
Braille.
>>>>> When I get nothing but an On Line
Manual, where I need to go On Line >>>>> to read the
thing. I am Thankful for at least that much, but
I >>>>> always look to see if I can just download the
manual so I don't need >>>>> to be going On Line so
much.
>>>>> Call it my personal
Taste.
>>>>> I would think most who are Blind have
learned over and over again to >>>>> look for Work Arounds
for doing many things in Life.
>>>>> You like
Braille, and while I do use it, I Hate it. So a
Braille >>>>> Manual would be a waste of resources to send
me one.
>>>>> You Love it, and can use it
well. So, when the Company doesn't send >>>>> a
manual in Braille, but has sent you one in PDF, or even Audio,
if >>>>> you want a manual in Braille, the Work around is
to convert that >>>>> Audio or >>>>> PDF
file into Braille. And if you are like me, and can't afford
a >>>>> Braille Printer, there are Services that will take
your Manual file >>>>> and make you a manual in
Braille.
>>>>> it may cost you a few dollars,
which again is all part of the Life of >>>>> someone who
is Blind. In the past, I have hired Readers to
read >>>>> Manuals on Tape. Paid them $10 for every
hour of Recorded material.
>>>>> I've paid people
to read my Mail. This was before smart Phones
had >>>>> built in Cameras and OCR programs. I
paid them $10 an hour too. this >>>>> was back in the
1980's and 90's.
>>>>> I haven't had to hire
anyone for about 20 years now
>>>>> And Dare I
bring up the Quality of Manuals? So often, regardless
of >>>>> what Format it comes in, the information in the
thing is totally Nuts! >>>>> It doesn't make Sense, and
you can't tell if it is a Translation of >>>>> something
in Chinese to English, or from Chinese to Spanish and
then >>>>> Russian, and then to English
etc.
>>>>> And some manuals that come in
English are so poorly written, lack >>>>> helpful
information and seem to be missing a great deal of
actual >>>>> instructional information and are next to
useless in any format.
>>>>> Grumpy
Dave
>
-- > They Ask Me If I'm Happy; I say Yes. > They ask: "How Happy
are You?" > I Say: "I'm as happy as a stow away chimpanzee on a banana
boat!"
>
-- Ann K. Parsons Portal
Tutoring EMAIL: akp@... Author of The Demmies: http://www.dldbooks.com/annparsons/ Portal
Tutoring web site: http://www.portaltutoring.info Skype:
Putertutor
"All that is gold does not glitter, Not all those who
wander are lost."
|
|
locked
Re: warning if you doing business
Unfortunately stories like his are all too common. In Canada we have APSEA, The Atlantic Provinces Special Education Authority. They serve children with disabilities until they reach post-secondary age. I was working with a young lady who was both blind and used a wheelchair. She was told by one of the teachers at APSEA that she would never succeed in University and that she was just wasting everyones time and money. The fact that she was twice as intelligent as he was didn’t seem to matter. He should have been fired on the spot for saying that to her. Today she is happily cruising through her third year at Carlton university in Ottawa, and I have every confidence in her that she will obtain that law degree she seeks.
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
From: main@TechTalk.groups.io <main@TechTalk.groups.io> On Behalf Of Ron Canazzi Sent: March 7, 2020 9:50 PM To: main@TechTalk.groups.io Subject: Re: [TechTalk] warning if you doing business Hi Gene,
I read Brian's heartfelt response just before I read your response to Ann. Now we can only go by what Brian is saying and as with everyone else, I wasn't there when all these things were done to him. Assuming that what he says is largely true, his situation seems to be more and more prevalent with blind people.
For example, I know a woman whose teachers determined that she was learning disabled when she was about five years old. From that time on, she was always told that she couldn't do this or couldn't do that and so on. To add to this, her parents were over protective and added to the issue. By the time I met her, she had become some what resigned to the fact that she couldn't do a lot of things--and in particular, she couldn't use a computer with the same ability of a normal blind person. After working with her for about six months, I was able to teacher a significant amount. I don't think she had any real learning disability. She was just conditioned to accept less someone else said about her true potential.
I knew another man who was diagnosed as profoundly mentally disabled. When I first met him, he was working in a sheltered workshop. Just talking to him, I did not think that he was in any form mentally challenged. So just on a whim, I started teaching him basic computer skills. He took to it like the proverbial duck to water. He now runs a number of distribution lists and is a member of the JAWS public beta team and the NVDA devlopment team.
So much for expert diagnosis of 'the blind.'
On 3/7/2020 6:33 PM, Gene wrote: It is far more useful to discuss possible ways of improving the situation rather than, and I'm sorry if you object, labeling someone with no real diagnostic work. If you label someone by saying he or she has different learning styles, what does that do? It implies that the rest of us who don't can do nothing to hhelp. And you are medicalizing a problem that may simply be largely someone rushing when he becomes emotionally involved in a discussion. I've seen many messages from Brian and I've seen many much better written ones. I simply do not believe you can diagnose some sort of problem by reading some e-mails, especially when more plausible explanations exist based on the number of much better written messages I've seen. I am trying to help by discussing the matter and not ;labeling or diagnosing. I'm using what I have observed. You are defending, labeling, and medicalizing a problem when there are other just as plausible or more plausible explanations. Ours is an age of medicalizing everything. If you rush to medicalize, you take attempts to help out of the hands of us mere mortals. it must be done by specialists. If I were convinced that there were some medical problem in this case, I might defer to the specialists. You haven't even begun to prove your contention. I'm sorry if you are offended and don't like what I've written. I'm not serving anyone if I don't honestly write what I think. Brian has sent a message saying that people on lists have told him to use a spell checker and asking about where to get one. That indicates that Brian wants to improve. I'm willing to help and I think a lot of others are as well. and I think you are as well. I believe that in a situation like this, you try to help by trying to solve problems in a practical way. One way is to find out what e-mail prohgram Brian is using. We can proceed from there. ----- Original Message ----- Sent: Saturday, March 07, 2020 3:35 PM Subject: Re: [TechTalk] warning if you doing business Hi all,
No, I am not making unsupported statements. First, after being a tutor to both sighted and blind students in English and in Social Studies, as well as in braille and adaptive computers, since 1978, I'm well acquainted with the signs of writing by persons who have learning differences. They are similar to the ways people who are DeafBlind write, so I wasn't sure which we're dealing with. Hmmm, let me see, 1978 was forty-two years ago now. Good Lord, that's a lot of experience! I'm still tutoring.
Although he may be rushing to write his responses, his writing has been consistent during the time I've observed him on various lists. This is not a single occurrance.
As for the coasting, he admits it himself in his message. He said that his teachers never told him his writing was less than adequate. That, Gene, my friend, is the behavior of teachers who allow PWD to coast through school.
If you want to check out my creds, you can look at my web site below. On there is a link called Instructor. Have a look.
Ann P.
Original message: > You are making unsupported statements. How do you know Brian has > learning differences? How do you know he was coasted through school? > I'll offer an alternative explanation. I'm not saying either are > correct nor am I saying which one may or may not account for observed > phenomena better. But how do you know that some or many of these errors > are not the result of someone feeling strongly about something and > rushing to get the message written as quickly as possible? If Brian is > typing far above the speed at which he types more accurately, that may > result in some of what is observed. And, since I've seen messages from > Brian that don't have all these mistakes, I'll consider my theory to be > a possibly better explanation, since I don't know Brian's background > and I think it is absurd to infer some sort of learning differences > based on a few e-mails. > But none of this, learning differences, spelling difficulties, a rush > to type as quickly as you can to get your message out as fast as > possible, none of these possibilities precludes the use of a spell checker. > To this point, I have been writing as a list member. I am now writing > as the list owner. > This discussion has been very interesting and we know more about each > other than we did, thus helping build community on the list. But if the > discussion becomes mostly one of how messages are written, I'll close > it. I realize that you and a few others may want to respond to what I > and others have said but this part of the discussion shouldn't continue > for more than a few more messages. > Now, I'm writing as a list member again. > Brian, I would think it may be uncomfortable seeing your writing > critiqued. But keep these things in mind and you may find the > experience useful: > My view is that if I expect someone to spend the time reading my > messages and thinking about them, I have a certain responsibility to > make them reasonably readable. In your case, many people probably have > to stop to review phrases where words are written together without > spaces. Because I've seen messages from you that are much better > written, it appears to me that if you get emotional about a subject, > you rush to write what you want as quickly as you can. the result is > errors that make your messages difficult to read, such as words written > together with no spaces. > As to spelling, in general I would just let that go. But when you call > a whole class of people illiterate, then don't use a spellchecker and > have misspelled wordafter misspelled word, then, like it or not, you > become part of the discussion. Like it or not, literacy is partly > sending a message without perhaps thirty or forty or more misspelled > words. And nothing precludes you from using a spellchecker. As I said, > in general I wouldn't comment on spelling, but it is inevitable that at > least a few people will when you accuse people of being illiterate and > don't use a spell checker, resulting in a great many misspellings. It's > as though I attended a cooking contest, made a speech before the event > in which I said that with frozen dinners, no one knows how to cook > anymore, then I burned the soup and my main dish. > Gene > ----- Original Message ----- > From: Ann Parsons <mailto:akp@...> > Sent: Saturday, March 07, 2020 6:27 AM > To: main@techtalk.groups.io <mailto:main@techtalk.groups.io> > Subject: Re: [TechTalk] warning if you doing business > Hi all,
> I could write a long rant about how I am treated when I correct > people's spelling publicly. I have been called harsh and arrogant and > more. I won't do that because it would be counter-productive. I will > say, however, that taking advantage of someone who has made a public > mistake is, I feel, cruel. it demeans those who perpetuate such crimes.
> If you wish to correct Brian's writing, you might do so privately, > thereby giving him the dignity he deserves. It isn't his fault that he > was coasted through school. It isn't his fault that he may not have a > braille display or possess hard copy braille so that he could improve > his writing.
> If you want to help, take it off-list! Truly be of service and not > part of the problem.
> Ann P.
> Original message: >> Now Brian,
>> I don't want to personalize this, but you say you're a good >> Braille reader now: correct? You say that people who use audio >> primarily aren't truly literate and you can tell by the way they write >> e-mails: is that what you're saying? Well let me be your teacher and >> quote and correct your own mistakes that you have made in your lengthy >> reply.
>> <spelling error> aAmen(I guess you are trying to say Amen to that or >> something similar--note the repetition of the first letter A.)
>> <grammatical clumsiness> if you don't braille than you are not truly >> literate. (I guess you mean: if you don't know/use/are competent in, >> Braille then you are not truly literate.)
>> <run on sentence> If you doubt this then read emails from blind people >> who don't know braille there spelling and (There should be a period >> after the word Braille.)
>> <spelling error> gramar and punctuation leave alot to be desired. (In >> this sentence grammar and a lot are misspelled.)
>> <run on sentence> I have been there myself if I don't read then I to >> will fall in to trap as well. (There should be a period after the word >> myself.)
>> If you truly want to be literate then you just have >> <spelling error> toread and not just listen to audio. (there is a run >> on word toread that should be separated into 'to read.') >> Those of us who do prefer braille and would rather read than listen >> have only audio as the option all to often. For me if I want to stay >> literate then I have to read braille and as I said in my email to Grumpy >> Dave I can't >> <spelling error> amagine my life with out braille. (I guess you mean >> 'imagine my life without Braille.)
>> <wrong use of the word loose> I have had braille most of my life and I >> would loose independence (I guess you mean lose independence.)
>> <spelling error> ifI were to not know braille. (You ran the words If >> and I together.)
>> Reading braille is active reading but listening to audio or computer >> speech is just passive reading.
>> I prefer to <spelling error> activly read but most of the time I can't >> because it's audio only. (You misspelled actively.)
>> <spelling errors and a run on sentence> I do rember haveing to cary >> volumes of braille books acrost campus at the blind school but I never >> gave it a though it was just what I hav to do it was no problem for me >> at all. (You misspelled remember, having, across and probably mean the >> word had when you wrote hav. And I almost forgot, you used the word >> though instead of thought.) (There should be a period after the word >> thought.)
>> The campus at the Michigan school for the blind in Lansing Michigan >> covered a 4 city block area. I tried college back in 1987-1988 and I >> could have >> <spelling error> donee much better if I had braille. (You misspelled >> the word done.)
>> <spelling errors> I had tapes from recording forthe blind but I had >> issues with the readers with pronouncations. (you ran the words for >> and the together. You misspelled pronunciation.)
>> I remember taking test and what I heard during the test sounded nothing >> like what I heard on the tapes.
>> If I would have had my books in braille I would have known the correct >> words and the tests would have made <spelling error> sinse. (You >> misspelled the word sense.)
>> <spelling error> If yur going to read on tape then you must be able to >> speak properly and say your words properly. (You misspelled the word >> you're--or at least I think that's what you meant by writing the word yur.)
>> <grammatical oddity> There was the issue of only tape at a time and >> having to send 2 copies of every book to recording for the blind to be >> recorded. (I'm not quite sure, but I think you meant 'only one tape at >> a time.)
>> <spelling error> Audio is usless if I don't know what you are saying. >> (You misspelled useless.)
>> This is why we need braille. Braille readers don't make a big deal of >> how many volumes a book is it just is.
>> LONG STORY SHORT: BRIAN, YOU ARE A POOR EXAMPLE OF THE IDEA THAT BRAILLE >> READERS WRITE COHERENT AND GRAMATICALLY CORRECT E-MAIL MESSAGES. >> On 3/6/2020 3:01 PM, brian wrote: >>> aAmen if you don't braille than you are not truly literate. If you >>> doubt this then read emails from blind people who don't know braille >>> there spelling and gramar and punctuation leave alot to be desired. I >>> have been there myself if I don't read then I to will fall in to trap >>> as well. If you truly want to be literate then you just have toread >>> and not just listen to audio. Those of us who do prefer braille and >>> would rather read than listen have only audio as the option all to >>> often. For me if I want to stay literate then I have to read braille >>> and as I said in my email to Grumpy Dave I can't amagine my life with >>> out braille. I have had braille most of my life and I would loose >>> independence ifI were to not know braille. Reading braille is active >>> reading but listening to audio or computer speech is just passive >>> reading. I prefer to activly read but most of the time I can't >>> because it's audio only. I do rember haveing to cary volumes of >>> braille books acrost campus at the blind school but I never gave it a >>> though it was just what I hav to do it was no problem for me at all. >>> The campus at the Michigan school for the blind in Lansing Michigan >>> covered a 4 city block area. I tried college back in 1987-1988 and I >>> could have donee much better if I had braille. I had tapes from >>> recording forthe blind but I had issues with the readers with >>> pronouncations. I remember taking test and what I heard during the >>> test sounded nothing like what I heard on the tapes. If I would have >>> had my books in braille I would have known the correct words and the >>> tests would have made sinse. If yur going to read on tape then you >>> must be able to speak properly and say your words properly. There was >>> the issue of only tape at a time and having to send 2 copies of every >>> book to recording for the blind to be recorded. Audio is usless if I >>> don't know what you are saying. This is why we need braille. Braille >>> readers don't make a big deal of how many volumes a book is it just is.
>>> Brian Sackrider
>>> On 3/6/2020 7:26 AM, chris judge wrote: >>>> This is true. There is a huge difference between not learning braille >>>> if you've lost your site later in life. The unfortunate fact is that >>>> even people who are blind since birth are not learning braille at the >>>> rate they were when I was a kid 50 years ago. If you are blind since >>>> birth and you don't learn braille you miss out on basic literacy. How >>>> do you learn proper spelling, grammar, punctuation and such if you >>>> don't learn braile. If you have had site you already understand these >>>> things so knowing braille isn't as paramount.
>>>> -----Original Message----- >>>> From: main@TechTalk.groups.io <mailto:main@TechTalk.groups.io> >>>> <main@TechTalk.groups.io <mailto:main@TechTalk.groups.io>> On Behalf Of >>>> Victor >>>> Sent: March 6, 2020 12:42 AM >>>> To: main@techtalk.groups.io <mailto:main@techtalk.groups.io> >>>> Subject: Re: [TechTalk] warning if you doing business
>>>> Hello everyone:
>>>> I would like to point out that many blind people lose their eyesight >>>> later in life and they find it too difficult to learn braille. It is >>>> much easier for them to access information by listening to audio. >>>> It’s hard enough for them to get over losing their eyesight and live >>>> without seeing their loved ones or other things ever again. The last >>>> thing they want is to learn a new skill that they may find just too >>>> difficult.
>>>> After obtaining my iPhone, I attended a users group where are the >>>> people taught each other to use iOS devices. While at the group one >>>> day, one of the group leaders brought a focus 40 refreshable braille >>>> display for everyone to examine. I was the only blind person in the >>>> room interested in touching the device because I knew braille and I >>>> owned a previous generation of that device. It was not discussed, but >>>> I knew that they were not interested because most of them had lost >>>> their eyesight later in life. I suspect that they found it much >>>> easier to listen to audio than reading braille. Plus, most of them >>>> had learned how to access information using their iPhones. I’m sure >>>> they found it much easier to whip out their iPhones and listen to >>>> their books, podcasts, scan documents and do everything else we can >>>> do with our iPhones. I realize that not everyone owns a smart phone >>>> because they have not found a way to obtain one. I also realize that >>>> not everyone is into these types of gadgets. However, many blind >>>> people have discovered how great these gadgets are and how useful >>>> they can be in helping them become more independent. For many of us, >>>> that is the route we have chosen.
>>>> In any case, don’t be too surprised if you meet a blind person who is >>>> not interested in learning braille. Don’t be too hard on those >>>> people. Maybe they just prefer to do what is easier.
>>>> I am so glad that refreshable braille displays exist now. I am also >>>> glad that low cost refreshable braille displays are being developed. >>>> I definitely don’t miss the days of carrying bulky braille books to >>>> and from my classes. I do not miss the days of trying to look up >>>> words in the dictionary and dealing with a whole bookshelf of braille >>>> books. No thank you! I do not miss my five volume braille New Testament.
>>>> If I did not already on a refreshable braille display, I would >>>> definitely look into obtaining the orbit braille reader or the >>>> braille me.
>>>> Anyhow, these are just my rambling opinions.
>>>> Victor Sent from my iPhone
>>>>> On Mar 5, 2020, at 7:40 PM, brian <bsackrider55@... >>>>> <mailto:bsackrider55@...>> wrote:
>>>>> Thanks Grumpy Dave for your explination. I would be willing to >>>>> pay a few dollars to get braille. I am not saying that I should get >>>>> for free but not to have the option is my complaint. My local >>>>> liberary use to provide braille for 10 cents per page. I was also >>>>> told that if I provided the paper they would braille what I wanted. >>>>> They required 67 weight paper which I can get at Staples. All to >>>>> often we are forced to except only audio as the only format that is >>>>> available. Braille will always be my prefered format because I >>>>> prefer to read for myself instead of just listen. You say that you >>>>> hate braille but you can use it well I feel the same about audio. >>>>> Why do we have to be locked in to just one format? How many people >>>>> would rather read than listen? Blind or sighted. People who prefer >>>>> to read than should be commended instead of being kind of bashed for >>>>> it. If not many blind people request braille than it should be no >>>>> trouble to provide it. Braille is not that dificult to produce once >>>>> you have the equipment. my liberary had no trouble all they needed >>>>> was files in microsoft word and the paper and they were good to go. >>>>> I use to get my weekly meterials for my church all in grade 2 >>>>> braille. It was really great to finally be an active participant in >>>>> the service instead just a pasive listener. To be able to read >>>>> along with everyone else the verses and hyms and classes lessons is >>>>> a great feeling you just can't discribe the independence that it >>>>> givesyou. It's kind of like having access to dvs you can finally >>>>> know what is going on when there is all of that dead air. I was >>>>> able to read infront of the church and be active in bible study and >>>>> even lead the groop all using braille. I do use braille menus when >>>>> ever possible even if I don't really need it just to let them see >>>>> that somone is acually using it. Braille has given me a very full >>>>> life and I don't know whear my life would be with out braille. I >>>>> feel that every blind person who is able to read braille should >>>>> learn it. I do understand that there are blind people who have >>>>> medical conditions that prevents them from being able to read >>>>> braille. For them they have no choice but to use audio but I do >>>>> have the choice I just don't like being limited to just audio only >>>>> and not braille. You hate braille and I hate audio. a good example >>>>> of when I wish that I had braille instead of a file was when I >>>>> requested my local newspaper to be accessable. my lions club >>>>> purchassed a sara reading machine for me there was no braille manual >>>>> but there was a print manual. I had to go to the help file on the >>>>> machine and try to find what I wanted. When I called the paper >>>>> office they asked what files my machine could read. If I had a >>>>> braille manual I could have just looked it up while on the phone and >>>>> gave them the answer. I had to call back after I went to the help >>>>> file and found it. This is very time concuming I can look up >>>>> somthing much faster in braille than any other format. I am not >>>>> saying that I can do it as quick as a sighted person can with print >>>>> but for me it's the fastest way for me to get the job done. When I >>>>> was a kid I attended the Michigan school the blind in Lansing and we >>>>> had to learn braille and all of our books were in braille. There >>>>> was no I don't want to learn it you had to. I will say that I can >>>>> certainly listen much faster than I can read but when it comes to >>>>> looking up somthing braille is faster hands down. I have been blind >>>>> since birth and thats all I ever knew was braille. It's like the >>>>> sighted grew up with print. I wanted to learn the opticon at the >>>>> rehab center but they would not let me because they said that I was >>>>> not fast enough. I felt that I was learning and making progress and >>>>> I should had the right to continue but they said no. If somone >>>>> really wants to learn a new skil then they should beallowed to do >>>>> so. If I am determind to learn somthing that then I will even >>>>> though it might take more time then the teacher would like. I guess >>>>> that modavation means nothing. If somone reallly wants to learn >>>>> braille so what ifit takes several month to do so they should not be >>>>> told no you can't continue. If companies had the equipment to >>>>> produce braille they could charge me for the cost of the paper to >>>>> get braille manuals or catalogs.
>>>>>> On 3/5/2020 9:26 PM, Dave wrote: >>>>>> Hello Brian,
>>>>>> I have nothing against Braille other than the hassle it is to create >>>>>> it, such as a Manual in Braille.
>>>>>> I've been blind for a long time now, and there were many times when I >>>>>> would have Kissed the Feet of anyone who gave me a manual in Audio >>>>>> format. many times have I had to just Wing it, learning by Guess and >>>>>> by Golly. Once Computers became a Tool for the Blind, Guessing was >>>>>> not always the best thing to do, as guessing wrong could ruin your >>>>>> day in a Big way. Still can.
>>>>>> but, Brian, I have no Beef with Braille. To produce it is just >>>>>> not an >>>>>> easy task. And I would guess that most manufacturers of items for >>>>>> the blind, may not want to hire another Staff member to do nothing >>>>>> but print out Manuals in Braille.
>>>>>> Yes, it all sounds good, until the costs of doing such a thing is >>>>>> considered.
>>>>>> These days, I do expect a Manual at least in a PDF format, if not an >>>>>> Audio file. And if I own my own Braille Printer, I can then print >>>>>> out the PDF file.
>>>>>> Although, I can't afford one of those printers, so I do without.
>>>>>> However, I could run the Audio file through an Audio to Text >>>>>> converter, and then print that file out in Braille.
>>>>>> When I get nothing but an On Line Manual, where I need to go On Line >>>>>> to read the thing. I am Thankful for at least that much, but I >>>>>> always look to see if I can just download the manual so I don't need >>>>>> to be going On Line so much.
>>>>>> Call it my personal Taste.
>>>>>> I would think most who are Blind have learned over and over again to >>>>>> look for Work Arounds for doing many things in Life.
>>>>>> You like Braille, and while I do use it, I Hate it. So a Braille >>>>>> Manual would be a waste of resources to send me one.
>>>>>> You Love it, and can use it well. So, when the Company doesn't send >>>>>> a manual in Braille, but has sent you one in PDF, or even Audio, if >>>>>> you want a manual in Braille, the Work around is to convert that >>>>>> Audio or >>>>>> PDF file into Braille. And if you are like me, and can't afford a >>>>>> Braille Printer, there are Services that will take your Manual file >>>>>> and make you a manual in Braille.
>>>>>> it may cost you a few dollars, which again is all part of the Life of >>>>>> someone who is Blind. In the past, I have hired Readers to read >>>>>> Manuals on Tape. Paid them $10 for every hour of Recorded material.
>>>>>> I've paid people to read my Mail. This was before smart Phones had >>>>>> built in Cameras and OCR programs. I paid them $10 an hour too. this >>>>>> was back in the 1980's and 90's.
>>>>>> I haven't had to hire anyone for about 20 years now
>>>>>> And Dare I bring up the Quality of Manuals? So often, regardless of >>>>>> what Format it comes in, the information in the thing is totally Nuts! >>>>>> It doesn't make Sense, and you can't tell if it is a Translation of >>>>>> something in Chinese to English, or from Chinese to Spanish and then >>>>>> Russian, and then to English etc.
>>>>>> And some manuals that come in English are so poorly written, lack >>>>>> helpful information and seem to be missing a great deal of actual >>>>>> instructional information and are next to useless in any format.
>>>>>> Grumpy Dave
>> -- >> They Ask Me If I'm Happy; I say Yes. >> They ask: "How Happy are You?" >> I Say: "I'm as happy as a stow away chimpanzee on a banana boat!"
> -- > Ann K. Parsons > Portal Tutoring > EMAIL: akp@... <mailto:akp@...> > Author of The Demmies: http://www.dldbooks.com/annparsons/ > <http://www.dldbooks.com/annparsons/> > Portal Tutoring web site: http://www.portaltutoring.info > <http://www.portaltutoring.info> > Skype: Putertutor
> "All that is gold does not glitter, > Not all those who wander are lost."
>
-- Ann K. Parsons Portal Tutoring EMAIL: akp@... Author of The Demmies: http://www.dldbooks.com/annparsons/ Portal Tutoring web site: http://www.portaltutoring.info Skype: Putertutor
"All that is gold does not glitter, Not all those who wander are lost."
-- They Ask Me If I'm Happy; I say Yes. They ask: "How Happy are You?" I Say: "I'm as happy as a stow away chimpanzee on a banana boat!"
|
|
I believe thunderbird has a spell checker. I don’t have thunderbird but I’m sure some kind soul on this list can give you a hand with it.
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
From: main@TechTalk.groups.io <main@TechTalk.groups.io> On Behalf Of brian Sent: March 7, 2020 8:55 PM To: main@TechTalk.groups.io Subject: Re: [TechTalk] spell checker I use thunderbird for my email. Brian Sackrider On 3/7/2020 5:41 PM, Gene wrote: What e-mail program are you using or are you using a webmail interface? ----- Original Message ----- Sent: Saturday, March 07, 2020 12:53 PM Subject: [TechTalk] spell checker People on this list and on other lists have told me to use a spell checker and thats all they say. They did not give me any options or tell me whear to get oneor how to use one. I don't have microsoft office. What is a good spell checker that works with nvda? Just telling me what I should do but not providing with out anyhelp information does me no good and is not helping me at all. I have not taken any computer classes what I know I have learned on my own. It seems that people are all to willing to tell me what I should do but don't give any helpful sugestions. I know that I do need help and I do want to make mymessages more readable. It's not that I don't care I just don't know what to do about the problem. It is true that if I write to fast than I will make lots of mistakes. The same is true if I write in braille. I do get very slopy if I write to fast. Brian Sackrider On 3/7/2020 12:13 PM, Gene wrote: You are making unsupported statements. How do you know Brian has learning differences? How do you know he was coasted through school? I'll offer an alternative explanation. I'm not saying either are correct nor am I saying which one may or may not account for observed phenomena better. But how do you know that some or many of these errors are not the result of someone feeling strongly about something and rushing to get the message written as quickly as possible? If Brian is typing far above the speed at which he types more accurately, that may result in some of what is observed. And, since I've seen messages from Brian that don't have all these mistakes, I'll consider my theory to be a possibly better explanation, since I don't know Brian's background and I think it is absurd to infer some sort of learning differences based on a few e-mails. But none of this, learning differences, spelling difficulties, a rush to type as quickly as you can to get your message out as fast as possible, none of these possibilities precludes the use of a spell checker. To this point, I have been writing as a list member. I am now writing as the list owner. This discussion has been very interesting and we know more about each other than we did, thus helping build community on the list. But if the discussion becomes mostly one of how messages are written, I'll close it. I realize that you and a few others may want to respond to what I and others have said but this part of the discussion shouldn't continue for more than a few more messages. Now, I'm writing as a list member again. Brian, I would think it may be uncomfortable seeing your writing critiqued. But keep these things in mind and you may find the experience useful: My view is that if I expect someone to spend the time reading my messages and thinking about them, I have a certain responsibility to make them reasonably readable. In your case, many people probably have to stop to review phrases where words are written together without spaces. Because I've seen messages from you that are much better written, it appears to me that if you get emotional about a subject, you rush to write what you want as quickly as you can. the result is errors that make your messages difficult to read, such as words written together with no spaces. As to spelling, in general I would just let that go. But when you call a whole class of people illiterate, then don't use a spellchecker and have misspelled wordafter misspelled word, then, like it or not, you become part of the discussion. Like it or not, literacy is partly sending a message without perhaps thirty or forty or more misspelled words. And nothing precludes you from using a spellchecker. As I said, in general I wouldn't comment on spelling, but it is inevitable that at least a few people will when you accuse people of being illiterate and don't use a spell checker, resulting in a great many misspellings. It's as though I attended a cooking contest, made a speech before the event in which I said that with frozen dinners, no one knows how to cook anymore, then I burned the soup and my main dish. ----- Original Message ----- Sent: Saturday, March 07, 2020 6:27 AM Subject: Re: [TechTalk] warning if you doing business Hi all,
I could write a long rant about how I am treated when I correct people's spelling publicly. I have been called harsh and arrogant and more. I won't do that because it would be counter-productive. I will say, however, that taking advantage of someone who has made a public mistake is, I feel, cruel. it demeans those who perpetuate such crimes.
If you wish to correct Brian's writing, you might do so privately, thereby giving him the dignity he deserves. It isn't his fault that he was coasted through school. It isn't his fault that he may not have a braille display or possess hard copy braille so that he could improve his writing.
If you want to help, take it off-list! Truly be of service and not part of the problem.
Ann P.
Original message: > Now Brian,
> I don't want to personalize this, but you say you're a good > Braille reader now: correct? You say that people who use audio > primarily aren't truly literate and you can tell by the way they write > e-mails: is that what you're saying? Well let me be your teacher and > quote and correct your own mistakes that you have made in your lengthy > reply.
> <spelling error> aAmen(I guess you are trying to say Amen to that or > something similar--note the repetition of the first letter A.)
> <grammatical clumsiness> if you don't braille than you are not truly > literate. (I guess you mean: if you don't know/use/are competent in, > Braille then you are not truly literate.)
> <run on sentence> If you doubt this then read emails from blind people > who don't know braille there spelling and (There should be a period > after the word Braille.)
> <spelling error> gramar and punctuation leave alot to be desired. (In > this sentence grammar and a lot are misspelled.)
> <run on sentence> I have been there myself if I don't read then I to > will fall in to trap as well. (There should be a period after the word > myself.)
> If you truly want to be literate then you just have > <spelling error> toread and not just listen to audio. (there is a run > on word toread that should be separated into 'to read.') > Those of us who do prefer braille and would rather read than listen > have only audio as the option all to often. For me if I want to stay > literate then I have to read braille and as I said in my email to Grumpy > Dave I can't > <spelling error> amagine my life with out braille. (I guess you mean > 'imagine my life without Braille.)
> <wrong use of the word loose> I have had braille most of my life and I > would loose independence (I guess you mean lose independence.)
> <spelling error> ifI were to not know braille. (You ran the words If > and I together.)
> Reading braille is active reading but listening to audio or computer > speech is just passive reading.
> I prefer to <spelling error> activly read but most of the time I can't > because it's audio only. (You misspelled actively.)
> <spelling errors and a run on sentence> I do rember haveing to cary > volumes of braille books acrost campus at the blind school but I never > gave it a though it was just what I hav to do it was no problem for me > at all. (You misspelled remember, having, across and probably mean the > word had when you wrote hav. And I almost forgot, you used the word > though instead of thought.) (There should be a period after the word > thought.)
> The campus at the Michigan school for the blind in Lansing Michigan > covered a 4 city block area. I tried college back in 1987-1988 and I > could have > <spelling error> donee much better if I had braille. (You misspelled > the word done.)
> <spelling errors> I had tapes from recording forthe blind but I had > issues with the readers with pronouncations. (you ran the words for > and the together. You misspelled pronunciation.)
> I remember taking test and what I heard during the test sounded nothing > like what I heard on the tapes.
> If I would have had my books in braille I would have known the correct > words and the tests would have made <spelling error> sinse. (You > misspelled the word sense.)
> <spelling error> If yur going to read on tape then you must be able to > speak properly and say your words properly. (You misspelled the word > you're--or at least I think that's what you meant by writing the word yur.)
> <grammatical oddity> There was the issue of only tape at a time and > having to send 2 copies of every book to recording for the blind to be > recorded. (I'm not quite sure, but I think you meant 'only one tape at > a time.)
> <spelling error> Audio is usless if I don't know what you are saying. > (You misspelled useless.)
> This is why we need braille. Braille readers don't make a big deal of > how many volumes a book is it just is.
> LONG STORY SHORT: BRIAN, YOU ARE A POOR EXAMPLE OF THE IDEA THAT BRAILLE > READERS WRITE COHERENT AND GRAMATICALLY CORRECT E-MAIL MESSAGES. > On 3/6/2020 3:01 PM, brian wrote: >> aAmen if you don't braille than you are not truly literate. If you >> doubt this then read emails from blind people who don't know braille >> there spelling and gramar and punctuation leave alot to be desired. I >> have been there myself if I don't read then I to will fall in to trap >> as well. If you truly want to be literate then you just have toread >> and not just listen to audio. Those of us who do prefer braille and >> would rather read than listen have only audio as the option all to >> often. For me if I want to stay literate then I have to read braille >> and as I said in my email to Grumpy Dave I can't amagine my life with >> out braille. I have had braille most of my life and I would loose >> independence ifI were to not know braille. Reading braille is active >> reading but listening to audio or computer speech is just passive >> reading. I prefer to activly read but most of the time I can't >> because it's audio only. I do rember haveing to cary volumes of >> braille books acrost campus at the blind school but I never gave it a >> though it was just what I hav to do it was no problem for me at all. >> The campus at the Michigan school for the blind in Lansing Michigan >> covered a 4 city block area. I tried college back in 1987-1988 and I >> could have donee much better if I had braille. I had tapes from >> recording forthe blind but I had issues with the readers with >> pronouncations. I remember taking test and what I heard during the >> test sounded nothing like what I heard on the tapes. If I would have >> had my books in braille I would have known the correct words and the >> tests would have made sinse. If yur going to read on tape then you >> must be able to speak properly and say your words properly. There was >> the issue of only tape at a time and having to send 2 copies of every >> book to recording for the blind to be recorded. Audio is usless if I >> don't know what you are saying. This is why we need braille. Braille >> readers don't make a big deal of how many volumes a book is it just is.
>> Brian Sackrider
>> On 3/6/2020 7:26 AM, chris judge wrote: >>> This is true. There is a huge difference between not learning braille >>> if you've lost your site later in life. The unfortunate fact is that >>> even people who are blind since birth are not learning braille at the >>> rate they were when I was a kid 50 years ago. If you are blind since >>> birth and you don't learn braille you miss out on basic literacy. How >>> do you learn proper spelling, grammar, punctuation and such if you >>> don't learn braile. If you have had site you already understand these >>> things so knowing braille isn't as paramount.
>>> -----Original Message----- >>> From: main@TechTalk.groups.io <main@TechTalk.groups.io> On Behalf Of >>> Victor >>> Sent: March 6, 2020 12:42 AM >>> To: main@techtalk.groups.io >>> Subject: Re: [TechTalk] warning if you doing business
>>> Hello everyone:
>>> I would like to point out that many blind people lose their eyesight >>> later in life and they find it too difficult to learn braille. It is >>> much easier for them to access information by listening to audio. >>> It’s hard enough for them to get over losing their eyesight and live >>> without seeing their loved ones or other things ever again. The last >>> thing they want is to learn a new skill that they may find just too >>> difficult.
>>> After obtaining my iPhone, I attended a users group where are the >>> people taught each other to use iOS devices. While at the group one >>> day, one of the group leaders brought a focus 40 refreshable braille >>> display for everyone to examine. I was the only blind person in the >>> room interested in touching the device because I knew braille and I >>> owned a previous generation of that device. It was not discussed, but >>> I knew that they were not interested because most of them had lost >>> their eyesight later in life. I suspect that they found it much >>> easier to listen to audio than reading braille. Plus, most of them >>> had learned how to access information using their iPhones. I’m sure >>> they found it much easier to whip out their iPhones and listen to >>> their books, podcasts, scan documents and do everything else we can >>> do with our iPhones. I realize that not everyone owns a smart phone >>> because they have not found a way to obtain one. I also realize that >>> not everyone is into these types of gadgets. However, many blind >>> people have discovered how great these gadgets are and how useful >>> they can be in helping them become more independent. For many of us, >>> that is the route we have chosen.
>>> In any case, don’t be too surprised if you meet a blind person who is >>> not interested in learning braille. Don’t be too hard on those >>> people. Maybe they just prefer to do what is easier.
>>> I am so glad that refreshable braille displays exist now. I am also >>> glad that low cost refreshable braille displays are being developed. >>> I definitely don’t miss the days of carrying bulky braille books to >>> and from my classes. I do not miss the days of trying to look up >>> words in the dictionary and dealing with a whole bookshelf of braille >>> books. No thank you! I do not miss my five volume braille New Testament.
>>> If I did not already on a refreshable braille display, I would >>> definitely look into obtaining the orbit braille reader or the >>> braille me.
>>> Anyhow, these are just my rambling opinions.
>>> Victor Sent from my iPhone
>>>> On Mar 5, 2020, at 7:40 PM, brian <bsackrider55@...> wrote:
>>>> Thanks Grumpy Dave for your explination. I would be willing to >>>> pay a few dollars to get braille. I am not saying that I should get >>>> for free but not to have the option is my complaint. My local >>>> liberary use to provide braille for 10 cents per page. I was also >>>> told that if I provided the paper they would braille what I wanted. >>>> They required 67 weight paper which I can get at Staples. All to >>>> often we are forced to except only audio as the only format that is >>>> available. Braille will always be my prefered format because I >>>> prefer to read for myself instead of just listen. You say that you >>>> hate braille but you can use it well I feel the same about audio. >>>> Why do we have to be locked in to just one format? How many people >>>> would rather read than listen? Blind or sighted. People who prefer >>>> to read than should be commended instead of being kind of bashed for >>>> it. If not many blind people request braille than it should be no >>>> trouble to provide it. Braille is not that dificult to produce once >>>> you have the equipment. my liberary had no trouble all they needed >>>> was files in microsoft word and the paper and they were good to go. >>>> I use to get my weekly meterials for my church all in grade 2 >>>> braille. It was really great to finally be an active participant in >>>> the service instead just a pasive listener. To be able to read >>>> along with everyone else the verses and hyms and classes lessons is >>>> a great feeling you just can't discribe the independence that it >>>> givesyou. It's kind of like having access to dvs you can finally >>>> know what is going on when there is all of that dead air. I was >>>> able to read infront of the church and be active in bible study and >>>> even lead the groop all using braille. I do use braille menus when >>>> ever possible even if I don't really need it just to let them see >>>> that somone is acually using it. Braille has given me a very full >>>> life and I don't know whear my life would be with out braille. I >>>> feel that every blind person who is able to read braille should >>>> learn it. I do understand that there are blind people who have >>>> medical conditions that prevents them from being able to read >>>> braille. For them they have no choice but to use audio but I do >>>> have the choice I just don't like being limited to just audio only >>>> and not braille. You hate braille and I hate audio. a good example >>>> of when I wish that I had braille instead of a file was when I >>>> requested my local newspaper to be accessable. my lions club >>>> purchassed a sara reading machine for me there was no braille manual >>>> but there was a print manual. I had to go to the help file on the >>>> machine and try to find what I wanted. When I called the paper >>>> office they asked what files my machine could read. If I had a >>>> braille manual I could have just looked it up while on the phone and >>>> gave them the answer. I had to call back after I went to the help >>>> file and found it. This is very time concuming I can look up >>>> somthing much faster in braille than any other format. I am not >>>> saying that I can do it as quick as a sighted person can with print >>>> but for me it's the fastest way for me to get the job done. When I >>>> was a kid I attended the Michigan school the blind in Lansing and we >>>> had to learn braille and all of our books were in braille. There >>>> was no I don't want to learn it you had to. I will say that I can >>>> certainly listen much faster than I can read but when it comes to >>>> looking up somthing braille is faster hands down. I have been blind >>>> since birth and thats all I ever knew was braille. It's like the >>>> sighted grew up with print. I wanted to learn the opticon at the >>>> rehab center but they would not let me because they said that I was >>>> not fast enough. I felt that I was learning and making progress and >>>> I should had the right to continue but they said no. If somone >>>> really wants to learn a new skil then they should beallowed to do >>>> so. If I am determind to learn somthing that then I will even >>>> though it might take more time then the teacher would like. I guess >>>> that modavation means nothing. If somone reallly wants to learn >>>> braille so what ifit takes several month to do so they should not be >>>> told no you can't continue. If companies had the equipment to >>>> produce braille they could charge me for the cost of the paper to >>>> get braille manuals or catalogs.
>>>>> On 3/5/2020 9:26 PM, Dave wrote: >>>>> Hello Brian,
>>>>> I have nothing against Braille other than the hassle it is to create >>>>> it, such as a Manual in Braille.
>>>>> I've been blind for a long time now, and there were many times when I >>>>> would have Kissed the Feet of anyone who gave me a manual in Audio >>>>> format. many times have I had to just Wing it, learning by Guess and >>>>> by Golly. Once Computers became a Tool for the Blind, Guessing was >>>>> not always the best thing to do, as guessing wrong could ruin your >>>>> day in a Big way. Still can.
>>>>> but, Brian, I have no Beef with Braille. To produce it is just >>>>> not an >>>>> easy task. And I would guess that most manufacturers of items for >>>>> the blind, may not want to hire another Staff member to do nothing >>>>> but print out Manuals in Braille.
>>>>> Yes, it all sounds good, until the costs of doing such a thing is >>>>> considered.
>>>>> These days, I do expect a Manual at least in a PDF format, if not an >>>>> Audio file. And if I own my own Braille Printer, I can then print >>>>> out the PDF file.
>>>>> Although, I can't afford one of those printers, so I do without.
>>>>> However, I could run the Audio file through an Audio to Text >>>>> converter, and then print that file out in Braille.
>>>>> When I get nothing but an On Line Manual, where I need to go On Line >>>>> to read the thing. I am Thankful for at least that much, but I >>>>> always look to see if I can just download the manual so I don't need >>>>> to be going On Line so much.
>>>>> Call it my personal Taste.
>>>>> I would think most who are Blind have learned over and over again to >>>>> look for Work Arounds for doing many things in Life.
>>>>> You like Braille, and while I do use it, I Hate it. So a Braille >>>>> Manual would be a waste of resources to send me one.
>>>>> You Love it, and can use it well. So, when the Company doesn't send >>>>> a manual in Braille, but has sent you one in PDF, or even Audio, if >>>>> you want a manual in Braille, the Work around is to convert that >>>>> Audio or >>>>> PDF file into Braille. And if you are like me, and can't afford a >>>>> Braille Printer, there are Services that will take your Manual file >>>>> and make you a manual in Braille.
>>>>> it may cost you a few dollars, which again is all part of the Life of >>>>> someone who is Blind. In the past, I have hired Readers to read >>>>> Manuals on Tape. Paid them $10 for every hour of Recorded material.
>>>>> I've paid people to read my Mail. This was before smart Phones had >>>>> built in Cameras and OCR programs. I paid them $10 an hour too. this >>>>> was back in the 1980's and 90's.
>>>>> I haven't had to hire anyone for about 20 years now
>>>>> And Dare I bring up the Quality of Manuals? So often, regardless of >>>>> what Format it comes in, the information in the thing is totally Nuts! >>>>> It doesn't make Sense, and you can't tell if it is a Translation of >>>>> something in Chinese to English, or from Chinese to Spanish and then >>>>> Russian, and then to English etc.
>>>>> And some manuals that come in English are so poorly written, lack >>>>> helpful information and seem to be missing a great deal of actual >>>>> instructional information and are next to useless in any format.
>>>>> Grumpy Dave
> -- > They Ask Me If I'm Happy; I say Yes. > They ask: "How Happy are You?" > I Say: "I'm as happy as a stow away chimpanzee on a banana boat!"
>
-- Ann K. Parsons Portal Tutoring EMAIL: akp@... Author of The Demmies: http://www.dldbooks.com/annparsons/ Portal Tutoring web site: http://www.portaltutoring.info Skype: Putertutor
"All that is gold does not glitter, Not all those who wander are lost."
|
|
locked
Re: warning if you doing business
That's good that you clarified your
position.
Gene
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Sunday, March 08, 2020 6:56 AM
Subject: Re: [TechTalk] warning if you doing
business
Hi all, Gene, it was not my intent to label. Just
because somebody has a different way of learning doesn't mean that an
ordinary person can't help. Sometimes educators and professionals of
whatever stripe give an impression that their profession is arcane and that
no one can do what they do. In the case of teaching, since teaching is
a gift given by The Holy Spirit, anyone can teach. You don't have to
have a piece of paper that says you can do so. Some folks who have
pieces of paper can't teach. Anything that will help Brian to write
better is worth doing, by educators and by lay people. It doesn't
matter. If it works, great! Ann P. -- Ann K.
Parsons Portal Tutoring EMAIL: akp@...Author of The Demmies: http://www.dldbooks.com/annparsons/Portal
Tutoring web site: http://www.portaltutoring.infoSkype:
Putertutor "All that is gold does not glitter, Not all those who
wander are lost."
|
|
locked
Re: warning if you doing business
Hi all, Gene, it was not my intent to label. Just because somebody has a different way of learning doesn't mean that an ordinary person can't help. Sometimes educators and professionals of whatever stripe give an impression that their profession is arcane and that no one can do what they do. In the case of teaching, since teaching is a gift given by The Holy Spirit, anyone can teach. You don't have to have a piece of paper that says you can do so. Some folks who have pieces of paper can't teach. Anything that will help Brian to write better is worth doing, by educators and by lay people. It doesn't matter. If it works, great! Ann P. -- Ann K. Parsons Portal Tutoring EMAIL: akp@sero.email Author of The Demmies: http://www.dldbooks.com/annparsons/Portal Tutoring web site: http://www.portaltutoring.infoSkype: Putertutor "All that is gold does not glitter, Not all those who wander are lost."
|
|
Does thunderbird have a spell checker?
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
From: main@TechTalk.groups.io <main@TechTalk.groups.io> On Behalf Of Mike B Sent: March 7, 2020 6:58 PM To: main@TechTalk.groups.io Subject: Re: [TechTalk] spell checker According to his email properties he's using Thunderbird, but he should probably verify this with the version as well. Take care. Mike. Sent from my iBarstool. Go dodgers!
----- Original Message ----- Sent: Saturday, March 07, 2020 2:41 PM Subject: Re: [TechTalk] spell checker What e-mail program are you using or are you using a webmail interface? ----- Original Message ----- Sent: Saturday, March 07, 2020 12:53 PM Subject: [TechTalk] spell checker People on this list and on other lists have told me to use a spell checker and thats all they say. They did not give me any options or tell me whear to get oneor how to use one. I don't have microsoft office. What is a good spell checker that works with nvda? Just telling me what I should do but not providing with out anyhelp information does me no good and is not helping me at all. I have not taken any computer classes what I know I have learned on my own. It seems that people are all to willing to tell me what I should do but don't give any helpful sugestions. I know that I do need help and I do want to make mymessages more readable. It's not that I don't care I just don't know what to do about the problem. It is true that if I write to fast than I will make lots of mistakes. The same is true if I write in braille. I do get very slopy if I write to fast. Brian Sackrider On 3/7/2020 12:13 PM, Gene wrote: You are making unsupported statements. How do you know Brian has learning differences? How do you know he was coasted through school? I'll offer an alternative explanation. I'm not saying either are correct nor am I saying which one may or may not account for observed phenomena better. But how do you know that some or many of these errors are not the result of someone feeling strongly about something and rushing to get the message written as quickly as possible? If Brian is typing far above the speed at which he types more accurately, that may result in some of what is observed. And, since I've seen messages from Brian that don't have all these mistakes, I'll consider my theory to be a possibly better explanation, since I don't know Brian's background and I think it is absurd to infer some sort of learning differences based on a few e-mails. But none of this, learning differences, spelling difficulties, a rush to type as quickly as you can to get your message out as fast as possible, none of these possibilities precludes the use of a spell checker. To this point, I have been writing as a list member. I am now writing as the list owner. This discussion has been very interesting and we know more about each other than we did, thus helping build community on the list. But if the discussion becomes mostly one of how messages are written, I'll close it. I realize that you and a few others may want to respond to what I and others have said but this part of the discussion shouldn't continue for more than a few more messages. Now, I'm writing as a list member again. Brian, I would think it may be uncomfortable seeing your writing critiqued. But keep these things in mind and you may find the experience useful: My view is that if I expect someone to spend the time reading my messages and thinking about them, I have a certain responsibility to make them reasonably readable. In your case, many people probably have to stop to review phrases where words are written together without spaces. Because I've seen messages from you that are much better written, it appears to me that if you get emotional about a subject, you rush to write what you want as quickly as you can. the result is errors that make your messages difficult to read, such as words written together with no spaces. As to spelling, in general I would just let that go. But when you call a whole class of people illiterate, then don't use a spellchecker and have misspelled wordafter misspelled word, then, like it or not, you become part of the discussion. Like it or not, literacy is partly sending a message without perhaps thirty or forty or more misspelled words. And nothing precludes you from using a spellchecker. As I said, in general I wouldn't comment on spelling, but it is inevitable that at least a few people will when you accuse people of being illiterate and don't use a spell checker, resulting in a great many misspellings. It's as though I attended a cooking contest, made a speech before the event in which I said that with frozen dinners, no one knows how to cook anymore, then I burned the soup and my main dish. ----- Original Message ----- Sent: Saturday, March 07, 2020 6:27 AM Subject: Re: [TechTalk] warning if you doing business Hi all,
I could write a long rant about how I am treated when I correct people's spelling publicly. I have been called harsh and arrogant and more. I won't do that because it would be counter-productive. I will say, however, that taking advantage of someone who has made a public mistake is, I feel, cruel. it demeans those who perpetuate such crimes.
If you wish to correct Brian's writing, you might do so privately, thereby giving him the dignity he deserves. It isn't his fault that he was coasted through school. It isn't his fault that he may not have a braille display or possess hard copy braille so that he could improve his writing.
If you want to help, take it off-list! Truly be of service and not part of the problem.
Ann P.
Original message: > Now Brian,
> I don't want to personalize this, but you say you're a good > Braille reader now: correct? You say that people who use audio > primarily aren't truly literate and you can tell by the way they write > e-mails: is that what you're saying? Well let me be your teacher and > quote and correct your own mistakes that you have made in your lengthy > reply.
> <spelling error> aAmen(I guess you are trying to say Amen to that or > something similar--note the repetition of the first letter A.)
> <grammatical clumsiness> if you don't braille than you are not truly > literate. (I guess you mean: if you don't know/use/are competent in, > Braille then you are not truly literate.)
> <run on sentence> If you doubt this then read emails from blind people > who don't know braille there spelling and (There should be a period > after the word Braille.)
> <spelling error> gramar and punctuation leave alot to be desired. (In > this sentence grammar and a lot are misspelled.)
> <run on sentence> I have been there myself if I don't read then I to > will fall in to trap as well. (There should be a period after the word > myself.)
> If you truly want to be literate then you just have > <spelling error> toread and not just listen to audio. (there is a run > on word toread that should be separated into 'to read.') > Those of us who do prefer braille and would rather read than listen > have only audio as the option all to often. For me if I want to stay > literate then I have to read braille and as I said in my email to Grumpy > Dave I can't > <spelling error> amagine my life with out braille. (I guess you mean > 'imagine my life without Braille.)
> <wrong use of the word loose> I have had braille most of my life and I > would loose independence (I guess you mean lose independence.)
> <spelling error> ifI were to not know braille. (You ran the words If > and I together.)
> Reading braille is active reading but listening to audio or computer > speech is just passive reading.
> I prefer to <spelling error> activly read but most of the time I can't > because it's audio only. (You misspelled actively.)
> <spelling errors and a run on sentence> I do rember haveing to cary > volumes of braille books acrost campus at the blind school but I never > gave it a though it was just what I hav to do it was no problem for me > at all. (You misspelled remember, having, across and probably mean the > word had when you wrote hav. And I almost forgot, you used the word > though instead of thought.) (There should be a period after the word > thought.)
> The campus at the Michigan school for the blind in Lansing Michigan > covered a 4 city block area. I tried college back in 1987-1988 and I > could have > <spelling error> donee much better if I had braille. (You misspelled > the word done.)
> <spelling errors> I had tapes from recording forthe blind but I had > issues with the readers with pronouncations. (you ran the words for > and the together. You misspelled pronunciation.)
> I remember taking test and what I heard during the test sounded nothing > like what I heard on the tapes.
> If I would have had my books in braille I would have known the correct > words and the tests would have made <spelling error> sinse. (You > misspelled the word sense.)
> <spelling error> If yur going to read on tape then you must be able to > speak properly and say your words properly. (You misspelled the word > you're--or at least I think that's what you meant by writing the word yur.)
> <grammatical oddity> There was the issue of only tape at a time and > having to send 2 copies of every book to recording for the blind to be > recorded. (I'm not quite sure, but I think you meant 'only one tape at > a time.)
> <spelling error> Audio is usless if I don't know what you are saying. > (You misspelled useless.)
> This is why we need braille. Braille readers don't make a big deal of > how many volumes a book is it just is.
> LONG STORY SHORT: BRIAN, YOU ARE A POOR EXAMPLE OF THE IDEA THAT BRAILLE > READERS WRITE COHERENT AND GRAMATICALLY CORRECT E-MAIL MESSAGES. > On 3/6/2020 3:01 PM, brian wrote: >> aAmen if you don't braille than you are not truly literate. If you >> doubt this then read emails from blind people who don't know braille >> there spelling and gramar and punctuation leave alot to be desired. I >> have been there myself if I don't read then I to will fall in to trap >> as well. If you truly want to be literate then you just have toread >> and not just listen to audio. Those of us who do prefer braille and >> would rather read than listen have only audio as the option all to >> often. For me if I want to stay literate then I have to read braille >> and as I said in my email to Grumpy Dave I can't amagine my life with >> out braille. I have had braille most of my life and I would loose >> independence ifI were to not know braille. Reading braille is active >> reading but listening to audio or computer speech is just passive >> reading. I prefer to activly read but most of the time I can't >> because it's audio only. I do rember haveing to cary volumes of >> braille books acrost campus at the blind school but I never gave it a >> though it was just what I hav to do it was no problem for me at all. >> The campus at the Michigan school for the blind in Lansing Michigan >> covered a 4 city block area. I tried college back in 1987-1988 and I >> could have donee much better if I had braille. I had tapes from >> recording forthe blind but I had issues with the readers with >> pronouncations. I remember taking test and what I heard during the >> test sounded nothing like what I heard on the tapes. If I would have >> had my books in braille I would have known the correct words and the >> tests would have made sinse. If yur going to read on tape then you >> must be able to speak properly and say your words properly. There was >> the issue of only tape at a time and having to send 2 copies of every >> book to recording for the blind to be recorded. Audio is usless if I >> don't know what you are saying. This is why we need braille. Braille >> readers don't make a big deal of how many volumes a book is it just is.
>> Brian Sackrider
>> On 3/6/2020 7:26 AM, chris judge wrote: >>> This is true. There is a huge difference between not learning braille >>> if you've lost your site later in life. The unfortunate fact is that >>> even people who are blind since birth are not learning braille at the >>> rate they were when I was a kid 50 years ago. If you are blind since >>> birth and you don't learn braille you miss out on basic literacy. How >>> do you learn proper spelling, grammar, punctuation and such if you >>> don't learn braile. If you have had site you already understand these >>> things so knowing braille isn't as paramount.
>>> -----Original Message----- >>> From: main@TechTalk.groups.io <main@TechTalk.groups.io> On Behalf Of >>> Victor >>> Sent: March 6, 2020 12:42 AM >>> To: main@techtalk.groups.io >>> Subject: Re: [TechTalk] warning if you doing business
>>> Hello everyone:
>>> I would like to point out that many blind people lose their eyesight >>> later in life and they find it too difficult to learn braille. It is >>> much easier for them to access information by listening to audio. >>> It’s hard enough for them to get over losing their eyesight and live >>> without seeing their loved ones or other things ever again. The last >>> thing they want is to learn a new skill that they may find just too >>> difficult.
>>> After obtaining my iPhone, I attended a users group where are the >>> people taught each other to use iOS devices. While at the group one >>> day, one of the group leaders brought a focus 40 refreshable braille >>> display for everyone to examine. I was the only blind person in the >>> room interested in touching the device because I knew braille and I >>> owned a previous generation of that device. It was not discussed, but >>> I knew that they were not interested because most of them had lost >>> their eyesight later in life. I suspect that they found it much >>> easier to listen to audio than reading braille. Plus, most of them >>> had learned how to access information using their iPhones. I’m sure >>> they found it much easier to whip out their iPhones and listen to >>> their books, podcasts, scan documents and do everything else we can >>> do with our iPhones. I realize that not everyone owns a smart phone >>> because they have not found a way to obtain one. I also realize that >>> not everyone is into these types of gadgets. However, many blind >>> people have discovered how great these gadgets are and how useful >>> they can be in helping them become more independent. For many of us, >>> that is the route we have chosen.
>>> In any case, don’t be too surprised if you meet a blind person who is >>> not interested in learning braille. Don’t be too hard on those >>> people. Maybe they just prefer to do what is easier.
>>> I am so glad that refreshable braille displays exist now. I am also >>> glad that low cost refreshable braille displays are being developed. >>> I definitely don’t miss the days of carrying bulky braille books to >>> and from my classes. I do not miss the days of trying to look up >>> words in the dictionary and dealing with a whole bookshelf of braille >>> books. No thank you! I do not miss my five volume braille New Testament.
>>> If I did not already on a refreshable braille display, I would >>> definitely look into obtaining the orbit braille reader or the >>> braille me.
>>> Anyhow, these are just my rambling opinions.
>>> Victor Sent from my iPhone
>>>> On Mar 5, 2020, at 7:40 PM, brian <bsackrider55@...> wrote:
>>>> Thanks Grumpy Dave for your explination. I would be willing to >>>> pay a few dollars to get braille. I am not saying that I should get >>>> for free but not to have the option is my complaint. My local >>>> liberary use to provide braille for 10 cents per page. I was also >>>> told that if I provided the paper they would braille what I wanted. >>>> They required 67 weight paper which I can get at Staples. All to >>>> often we are forced to except only audio as the only format that is >>>> available. Braille will always be my prefered format because I >>>> prefer to read for myself instead of just listen. You say that you >>>> hate braille but you can use it well I feel the same about audio. >>>> Why do we have to be locked in to just one format? How many people >>>> would rather read than listen? Blind or sighted. People who prefer >>>> to read than should be commended instead of being kind of bashed for >>>> it. If not many blind people request braille than it should be no >>>> trouble to provide it. Braille is not that dificult to produce once >>>> you have the equipment. my liberary had no trouble all they needed >>>> was files in microsoft word and the paper and they were good to go. >>>> I use to get my weekly meterials for my church all in grade 2 >>>> braille. It was really great to finally be an active participant in >>>> the service instead just a pasive listener. To be able to read >>>> along with everyone else the verses and hyms and classes lessons is >>>> a great feeling you just can't discribe the independence that it >>>> givesyou. It's kind of like having access to dvs you can finally >>>> know what is going on when there is all of that dead air. I was >>>> able to read infront of the church and be active in bible study and >>>> even lead the groop all using braille. I do use braille menus when >>>> ever possible even if I don't really need it just to let them see >>>> that somone is acually using it. Braille has given me a very full >>>> life and I don't know whear my life would be with out braille. I >>>> feel that every blind person who is able to read braille should >>>> learn it. I do understand that there are blind people who have >>>> medical conditions that prevents them from being able to read >>>> braille. For them they have no choice but to use audio but I do >>>> have the choice I just don't like being limited to just audio only >>>> and not braille. You hate braille and I hate audio. a good example >>>> of when I wish that I had braille instead of a file was when I >>>> requested my local newspaper to be accessable. my lions club >>>> purchassed a sara reading machine for me there was no braille manual >>>> but there was a print manual. I had to go to the help file on the >>>> machine and try to find what I wanted. When I called the paper >>>> office they asked what files my machine could read. If I had a >>>> braille manual I could have just looked it up while on the phone and >>>> gave them the answer. I had to call back after I went to the help >>>> file and found it. This is very time concuming I can look up >>>> somthing much faster in braille than any other format. I am not >>>> saying that I can do it as quick as a sighted person can with print >>>> but for me it's the fastest way for me to get the job done. When I >>>> was a kid I attended the Michigan school the blind in Lansing and we >>>> had to learn braille and all of our books were in braille. There >>>> was no I don't want to learn it you had to. I will say that I can >>>> certainly listen much faster than I can read but when it comes to >>>> looking up somthing braille is faster hands down. I have been blind >>>> since birth and thats all I ever knew was braille. It's like the >>>> sighted grew up with print. I wanted to learn the opticon at the >>>> rehab center but they would not let me because they said that I was >>>> not fast enough. I felt that I was learning and making progress and >>>> I should had the right to continue but they said no. If somone >>>> really wants to learn a new skil then they should beallowed to do >>>> so. If I am determind to learn somthing that then I will even >>>> though it might take more time then the teacher would like. I guess >>>> that modavation means nothing. If somone reallly wants to learn >>>> braille so what ifit takes several month to do so they should not be >>>> told no you can't continue. If companies had the equipment to >>>> produce braille they could charge me for the cost of the paper to >>>> get braille manuals or catalogs.
>>>>> On 3/5/2020 9:26 PM, Dave wrote: >>>>> Hello Brian,
>>>>> I have nothing against Braille other than the hassle it is to create >>>>> it, such as a Manual in Braille.
>>>>> I've been blind for a long time now, and there were many times when I >>>>> would have Kissed the Feet of anyone who gave me a manual in Audio >>>>> format. many times have I had to just Wing it, learning by Guess and >>>>> by Golly. Once Computers became a Tool for the Blind, Guessing was >>>>> not always the best thing to do, as guessing wrong could ruin your >>>>> day in a Big way. Still can.
>>>>> but, Brian, I have no Beef with Braille. To produce it is just >>>>> not an >>>>> easy task. And I would guess that most manufacturers of items for >>>>> the blind, may not want to hire another Staff member to do nothing >>>>> but print out Manuals in Braille.
>>>>> Yes, it all sounds good, until the costs of doing such a thing is >>>>> considered.
>>>>> These days, I do expect a Manual at least in a PDF format, if not an >>>>> Audio file. And if I own my own Braille Printer, I can then print >>>>> out the PDF file.
>>>>> Although, I can't afford one of those printers, so I do without.
>>>>> However, I could run the Audio file through an Audio to Text >>>>> converter, and then print that file out in Braille.
>>>>> When I get nothing but an On Line Manual, where I need to go On Line >>>>> to read the thing. I am Thankful for at least that much, but I >>>>> always look to see if I can just download the manual so I don't need >>>>> to be going On Line so much.
>>>>> Call it my personal Taste.
>>>>> I would think most who are Blind have learned over and over again to >>>>> look for Work Arounds for doing many things in Life.
>>>>> You like Braille, and while I do use it, I Hate it. So a Braille >>>>> Manual would be a waste of resources to send me one.
>>>>> You Love it, and can use it well. So, when the Company doesn't send >>>>> a manual in Braille, but has sent you one in PDF, or even Audio, if >>>>> you want a manual in Braille, the Work around is to convert that >>>>> Audio or >>>>> PDF file into Braille. And if you are like me, and can't afford a >>>>> Braille Printer, there are Services that will take your Manual file >>>>> and make you a manual in Braille.
>>>>> it may cost you a few dollars, which again is all part of the Life of >>>>> someone who is Blind. In the past, I have hired Readers to read >>>>> Manuals on Tape. Paid them $10 for every hour of Recorded material.
>>>>> I've paid people to read my Mail. This was before smart Phones had >>>>> built in Cameras and OCR programs. I paid them $10 an hour too. this >>>>> was back in the 1980's and 90's.
>>>>> I haven't had to hire anyone for about 20 years now
>>>>> And Dare I bring up the Quality of Manuals? So often, regardless of >>>>> what Format it comes in, the information in the thing is totally Nuts! >>>>> It doesn't make Sense, and you can't tell if it is a Translation of >>>>> something in Chinese to English, or from Chinese to Spanish and then >>>>> Russian, and then to English etc.
>>>>> And some manuals that come in English are so poorly written, lack >>>>> helpful information and seem to be missing a great deal of actual >>>>> instructional information and are next to useless in any format.
>>>>> Grumpy Dave
> -- > They Ask Me If I'm Happy; I say Yes. > They ask: "How Happy are You?" > I Say: "I'm as happy as a stow away chimpanzee on a banana boat!"
>
-- Ann K. Parsons Portal Tutoring EMAIL: akp@... Author of The Demmies: http://www.dldbooks.com/annparsons/ Portal Tutoring web site: http://www.portaltutoring.info Skype: Putertutor
"All that is gold does not glitter, Not all those who wander are lost."
|
|
There is a spell checker program called tiny spell. I had it on my pc for a while but took it off because I have ms office and wasn’t using it. I’m sure others on the list have used it and can speak to it’s pros and cons.
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
From: main@TechTalk.groups.io <main@TechTalk.groups.io> On Behalf Of Gene Sent: March 7, 2020 6:42 PM To: main@TechTalk.groups.io Subject: Re: [TechTalk] spell checker What e-mail program are you using or are you using a webmail interface? ----- Original Message ----- Sent: Saturday, March 07, 2020 12:53 PM Subject: [TechTalk] spell checker People on this list and on other lists have told me to use a spell checker and thats all they say. They did not give me any options or tell me whear to get oneor how to use one. I don't have microsoft office. What is a good spell checker that works with nvda? Just telling me what I should do but not providing with out anyhelp information does me no good and is not helping me at all. I have not taken any computer classes what I know I have learned on my own. It seems that people are all to willing to tell me what I should do but don't give any helpful sugestions. I know that I do need help and I do want to make mymessages more readable. It's not that I don't care I just don't know what to do about the problem. It is true that if I write to fast than I will make lots of mistakes. The same is true if I write in braille. I do get very slopy if I write to fast. Brian Sackrider On 3/7/2020 12:13 PM, Gene wrote: You are making unsupported statements. How do you know Brian has learning differences? How do you know he was coasted through school? I'll offer an alternative explanation. I'm not saying either are correct nor am I saying which one may or may not account for observed phenomena better. But how do you know that some or many of these errors are not the result of someone feeling strongly about something and rushing to get the message written as quickly as possible? If Brian is typing far above the speed at which he types more accurately, that may result in some of what is observed. And, since I've seen messages from Brian that don't have all these mistakes, I'll consider my theory to be a possibly better explanation, since I don't know Brian's background and I think it is absurd to infer some sort of learning differences based on a few e-mails. But none of this, learning differences, spelling difficulties, a rush to type as quickly as you can to get your message out as fast as possible, none of these possibilities precludes the use of a spell checker. To this point, I have been writing as a list member. I am now writing as the list owner. This discussion has been very interesting and we know more about each other than we did, thus helping build community on the list. But if the discussion becomes mostly one of how messages are written, I'll close it. I realize that you and a few others may want to respond to what I and others have said but this part of the discussion shouldn't continue for more than a few more messages. Now, I'm writing as a list member again. Brian, I would think it may be uncomfortable seeing your writing critiqued. But keep these things in mind and you may find the experience useful: My view is that if I expect someone to spend the time reading my messages and thinking about them, I have a certain responsibility to make them reasonably readable. In your case, many people probably have to stop to review phrases where words are written together without spaces. Because I've seen messages from you that are much better written, it appears to me that if you get emotional about a subject, you rush to write what you want as quickly as you can. the result is errors that make your messages difficult to read, such as words written together with no spaces. As to spelling, in general I would just let that go. But when you call a whole class of people illiterate, then don't use a spellchecker and have misspelled wordafter misspelled word, then, like it or not, you become part of the discussion. Like it or not, literacy is partly sending a message without perhaps thirty or forty or more misspelled words. And nothing precludes you from using a spellchecker. As I said, in general I wouldn't comment on spelling, but it is inevitable that at least a few people will when you accuse people of being illiterate and don't use a spell checker, resulting in a great many misspellings. It's as though I attended a cooking contest, made a speech before the event in which I said that with frozen dinners, no one knows how to cook anymore, then I burned the soup and my main dish. ----- Original Message ----- Sent: Saturday, March 07, 2020 6:27 AM Subject: Re: [TechTalk] warning if you doing business Hi all,
I could write a long rant about how I am treated when I correct people's spelling publicly. I have been called harsh and arrogant and more. I won't do that because it would be counter-productive. I will say, however, that taking advantage of someone who has made a public mistake is, I feel, cruel. it demeans those who perpetuate such crimes.
If you wish to correct Brian's writing, you might do so privately, thereby giving him the dignity he deserves. It isn't his fault that he was coasted through school. It isn't his fault that he may not have a braille display or possess hard copy braille so that he could improve his writing.
If you want to help, take it off-list! Truly be of service and not part of the problem.
Ann P.
Original message: > Now Brian,
> I don't want to personalize this, but you say you're a good > Braille reader now: correct? You say that people who use audio > primarily aren't truly literate and you can tell by the way they write > e-mails: is that what you're saying? Well let me be your teacher and > quote and correct your own mistakes that you have made in your lengthy > reply.
> <spelling error> aAmen(I guess you are trying to say Amen to that or > something similar--note the repetition of the first letter A.)
> <grammatical clumsiness> if you don't braille than you are not truly > literate. (I guess you mean: if you don't know/use/are competent in, > Braille then you are not truly literate.)
> <run on sentence> If you doubt this then read emails from blind people > who don't know braille there spelling and (There should be a period > after the word Braille.)
> <spelling error> gramar and punctuation leave alot to be desired. (In > this sentence grammar and a lot are misspelled.)
> <run on sentence> I have been there myself if I don't read then I to > will fall in to trap as well. (There should be a period after the word > myself.)
> If you truly want to be literate then you just have > <spelling error> toread and not just listen to audio. (there is a run > on word toread that should be separated into 'to read.') > Those of us who do prefer braille and would rather read than listen > have only audio as the option all to often. For me if I want to stay > literate then I have to read braille and as I said in my email to Grumpy > Dave I can't > <spelling error> amagine my life with out braille. (I guess you mean > 'imagine my life without Braille.)
> <wrong use of the word loose> I have had braille most of my life and I > would loose independence (I guess you mean lose independence.)
> <spelling error> ifI were to not know braille. (You ran the words If > and I together.)
> Reading braille is active reading but listening to audio or computer > speech is just passive reading.
> I prefer to <spelling error> activly read but most of the time I can't > because it's audio only. (You misspelled actively.)
> <spelling errors and a run on sentence> I do rember haveing to cary > volumes of braille books acrost campus at the blind school but I never > gave it a though it was just what I hav to do it was no problem for me > at all. (You misspelled remember, having, across and probably mean the > word had when you wrote hav. And I almost forgot, you used the word > though instead of thought.) (There should be a period after the word > thought.)
> The campus at the Michigan school for the blind in Lansing Michigan > covered a 4 city block area. I tried college back in 1987-1988 and I > could have > <spelling error> donee much better if I had braille. (You misspelled > the word done.)
> <spelling errors> I had tapes from recording forthe blind but I had > issues with the readers with pronouncations. (you ran the words for > and the together. You misspelled pronunciation.)
> I remember taking test and what I heard during the test sounded nothing > like what I heard on the tapes.
> If I would have had my books in braille I would have known the correct > words and the tests would have made <spelling error> sinse. (You > misspelled the word sense.)
> <spelling error> If yur going to read on tape then you must be able to > speak properly and say your words properly. (You misspelled the word > you're--or at least I think that's what you meant by writing the word yur.)
> <grammatical oddity> There was the issue of only tape at a time and > having to send 2 copies of every book to recording for the blind to be > recorded. (I'm not quite sure, but I think you meant 'only one tape at > a time.)
> <spelling error> Audio is usless if I don't know what you are saying. > (You misspelled useless.)
> This is why we need braille. Braille readers don't make a big deal of > how many volumes a book is it just is.
> LONG STORY SHORT: BRIAN, YOU ARE A POOR EXAMPLE OF THE IDEA THAT BRAILLE > READERS WRITE COHERENT AND GRAMATICALLY CORRECT E-MAIL MESSAGES. > On 3/6/2020 3:01 PM, brian wrote: >> aAmen if you don't braille than you are not truly literate. If you >> doubt this then read emails from blind people who don't know braille >> there spelling and gramar and punctuation leave alot to be desired. I >> have been there myself if I don't read then I to will fall in to trap >> as well. If you truly want to be literate then you just have toread >> and not just listen to audio. Those of us who do prefer braille and >> would rather read than listen have only audio as the option all to >> often. For me if I want to stay literate then I have to read braille >> and as I said in my email to Grumpy Dave I can't amagine my life with >> out braille. I have had braille most of my life and I would loose >> independence ifI were to not know braille. Reading braille is active >> reading but listening to audio or computer speech is just passive >> reading. I prefer to activly read but most of the time I can't >> because it's audio only. I do rember haveing to cary volumes of >> braille books acrost campus at the blind school but I never gave it a >> though it was just what I hav to do it was no problem for me at all. >> The campus at the Michigan school for the blind in Lansing Michigan >> covered a 4 city block area. I tried college back in 1987-1988 and I >> could have donee much better if I had braille. I had tapes from >> recording forthe blind but I had issues with the readers with >> pronouncations. I remember taking test and what I heard during the >> test sounded nothing like what I heard on the tapes. If I would have >> had my books in braille I would have known the correct words and the >> tests would have made sinse. If yur going to read on tape then you >> must be able to speak properly and say your words properly. There was >> the issue of only tape at a time and having to send 2 copies of every >> book to recording for the blind to be recorded. Audio is usless if I >> don't know what you are saying. This is why we need braille. Braille >> readers don't make a big deal of how many volumes a book is it just is.
>> Brian Sackrider
>> On 3/6/2020 7:26 AM, chris judge wrote: >>> This is true. There is a huge difference between not learning braille >>> if you've lost your site later in life. The unfortunate fact is that >>> even people who are blind since birth are not learning braille at the >>> rate they were when I was a kid 50 years ago. If you are blind since >>> birth and you don't learn braille you miss out on basic literacy. How >>> do you learn proper spelling, grammar, punctuation and such if you >>> don't learn braile. If you have had site you already understand these >>> things so knowing braille isn't as paramount.
>>> -----Original Message----- >>> From: main@TechTalk.groups.io <main@TechTalk.groups.io> On Behalf Of >>> Victor >>> Sent: March 6, 2020 12:42 AM >>> To: main@techtalk.groups.io >>> Subject: Re: [TechTalk] warning if you doing business
>>> Hello everyone:
>>> I would like to point out that many blind people lose their eyesight >>> later in life and they find it too difficult to learn braille. It is >>> much easier for them to access information by listening to audio. >>> It’s hard enough for them to get over losing their eyesight and live >>> without seeing their loved ones or other things ever again. The last >>> thing they want is to learn a new skill that they may find just too >>> difficult.
>>> After obtaining my iPhone, I attended a users group where are the >>> people taught each other to use iOS devices. While at the group one >>> day, one of the group leaders brought a focus 40 refreshable braille >>> display for everyone to examine. I was the only blind person in the >>> room interested in touching the device because I knew braille and I >>> owned a previous generation of that device. It was not discussed, but >>> I knew that they were not interested because most of them had lost >>> their eyesight later in life. I suspect that they found it much >>> easier to listen to audio than reading braille. Plus, most of them >>> had learned how to access information using their iPhones. I’m sure >>> they found it much easier to whip out their iPhones and listen to >>> their books, podcasts, scan documents and do everything else we can >>> do with our iPhones. I realize that not everyone owns a smart phone >>> because they have not found a way to obtain one. I also realize that >>> not everyone is into these types of gadgets. However, many blind >>> people have discovered how great these gadgets are and how useful >>> they can be in helping them become more independent. For many of us, >>> that is the route we have chosen.
>>> In any case, don’t be too surprised if you meet a blind person who is >>> not interested in learning braille. Don’t be too hard on those >>> people. Maybe they just prefer to do what is easier.
>>> I am so glad that refreshable braille displays exist now. I am also >>> glad that low cost refreshable braille displays are being developed. >>> I definitely don’t miss the days of carrying bulky braille books to >>> and from my classes. I do not miss the days of trying to look up >>> words in the dictionary and dealing with a whole bookshelf of braille >>> books. No thank you! I do not miss my five volume braille New Testament.
>>> If I did not already on a refreshable braille display, I would >>> definitely look into obtaining the orbit braille reader or the >>> braille me.
>>> Anyhow, these are just my rambling opinions.
>>> Victor Sent from my iPhone
>>>> On Mar 5, 2020, at 7:40 PM, brian <bsackrider55@...> wrote:
>>>> Thanks Grumpy Dave for your explination. I would be willing to >>>> pay a few dollars to get braille. I am not saying that I should get >>>> for free but not to have the option is my complaint. My local >>>> liberary use to provide braille for 10 cents per page. I was also >>>> told that if I provided the paper they would braille what I wanted. >>>> They required 67 weight paper which I can get at Staples. All to >>>> often we are forced to except only audio as the only format that is >>>> available. Braille will always be my prefered format because I >>>> prefer to read for myself instead of just listen. You say that you >>>> hate braille but you can use it well I feel the same about audio. >>>> Why do we have to be locked in to just one format? How many people >>>> would rather read than listen? Blind or sighted. People who prefer >>>> to read than should be commended instead of being kind of bashed for >>>> it. If not many blind people request braille than it should be no >>>> trouble to provide it. Braille is not that dificult to produce once >>>> you have the equipment. my liberary had no trouble all they needed >>>> was files in microsoft word and the paper and they were good to go. >>>> I use to get my weekly meterials for my church all in grade 2 >>>> braille. It was really great to finally be an active participant in >>>> the service instead just a pasive listener. To be able to read >>>> along with everyone else the verses and hyms and classes lessons is >>>> a great feeling you just can't discribe the independence that it >>>> givesyou. It's kind of like having access to dvs you can finally >>>> know what is going on when there is all of that dead air. I was >>>> able to read infront of the church and be active in bible study and >>>> even lead the groop all using braille. I do use braille menus when >>>> ever possible even if I don't really need it just to let them see >>>> that somone is acually using it. Braille has given me a very full >>>> life and I don't know whear my life would be with out braille. I >>>> feel that every blind person who is able to read braille should >>>> learn it. I do understand that there are blind people who have >>>> medical conditions that prevents them from being able to read >>>> braille. For them they have no choice but to use audio but I do >>>> have the choice I just don't like being limited to just audio only >>>> and not braille. You hate braille and I hate audio. a good example >>>> of when I wish that I had braille instead of a file was when I >>>> requested my local newspaper to be accessable. my lions club >>>> purchassed a sara reading machine for me there was no braille manual >>>> but there was a print manual. I had to go to the help file on the >>>> machine and try to find what I wanted. When I called the paper >>>> office they asked what files my machine could read. If I had a >>>> braille manual I could have just looked it up while on the phone and >>>> gave them the answer. I had to call back after I went to the help >>>> file and found it. This is very time concuming I can look up >>>> somthing much faster in braille than any other format. I am not >>>> saying that I can do it as quick as a sighted person can with print >>>> but for me it's the fastest way for me to get the job done. When I >>>> was a kid I attended the Michigan school the blind in Lansing and we >>>> had to learn braille and all of our books were in braille. There >>>> was no I don't want to learn it you had to. I will say that I can >>>> certainly listen much faster than I can read but when it comes to >>>> looking up somthing braille is faster hands down. I have been blind >>>> since birth and thats all I ever knew was braille. It's like the >>>> sighted grew up with print. I wanted to learn the opticon at the >>>> rehab center but they would not let me because they said that I was >>>> not fast enough. I felt that I was learning and making progress and >>>> I should had the right to continue but they said no. If somone >>>> really wants to learn a new skil then they should beallowed to do >>>> so. If I am determind to learn somthing that then I will even >>>> though it might take more time then the teacher would like. I guess >>>> that modavation means nothing. If somone reallly wants to learn >>>> braille so what ifit takes several month to do so they should not be >>>> told no you can't continue. If companies had the equipment to >>>> produce braille they could charge me for the cost of the paper to >>>> get braille manuals or catalogs.
>>>>> On 3/5/2020 9:26 PM, Dave wrote: >>>>> Hello Brian,
>>>>> I have nothing against Braille other than the hassle it is to create >>>>> it, such as a Manual in Braille.
>>>>> I've been blind for a long time now, and there were many times when I >>>>> would have Kissed the Feet of anyone who gave me a manual in Audio >>>>> format. many times have I had to just Wing it, learning by Guess and >>>>> by Golly. Once Computers became a Tool for the Blind, Guessing was >>>>> not always the best thing to do, as guessing wrong could ruin your >>>>> day in a Big way. Still can.
>>>>> but, Brian, I have no Beef with Braille. To produce it is just >>>>> not an >>>>> easy task. And I would guess that most manufacturers of items for >>>>> the blind, may not want to hire another Staff member to do nothing >>>>> but print out Manuals in Braille.
>>>>> Yes, it all sounds good, until the costs of doing such a thing is >>>>> considered.
>>>>> These days, I do expect a Manual at least in a PDF format, if not an >>>>> Audio file. And if I own my own Braille Printer, I can then print >>>>> out the PDF file.
>>>>> Although, I can't afford one of those printers, so I do without.
>>>>> However, I could run the Audio file through an Audio to Text >>>>> converter, and then print that file out in Braille.
>>>>> When I get nothing but an On Line Manual, where I need to go On Line >>>>> to read the thing. I am Thankful for at least that much, but I >>>>> always look to see if I can just download the manual so I don't need >>>>> to be going On Line so much.
>>>>> Call it my personal Taste.
>>>>> I would think most who are Blind have learned over and over again to >>>>> look for Work Arounds for doing many things in Life.
>>>>> You like Braille, and while I do use it, I Hate it. So a Braille >>>>> Manual would be a waste of resources to send me one.
>>>>> You Love it, and can use it well. So, when the Company doesn't send >>>>> a manual in Braille, but has sent you one in PDF, or even Audio, if >>>>> you want a manual in Braille, the Work around is to convert that >>>>> Audio or >>>>> PDF file into Braille. And if you are like me, and can't afford a >>>>> Braille Printer, there are Services that will take your Manual file >>>>> and make you a manual in Braille.
>>>>> it may cost you a few dollars, which again is all part of the Life of >>>>> someone who is Blind. In the past, I have hired Readers to read >>>>> Manuals on Tape. Paid them $10 for every hour of Recorded material.
>>>>> I've paid people to read my Mail. This was before smart Phones had >>>>> built in Cameras and OCR programs. I paid them $10 an hour too. this >>>>> was back in the 1980's and 90's.
>>>>> I haven't had to hire anyone for about 20 years now
>>>>> And Dare I bring up the Quality of Manuals? So often, regardless of >>>>> what Format it comes in, the information in the thing is totally Nuts! >>>>> It doesn't make Sense, and you can't tell if it is a Translation of >>>>> something in Chinese to English, or from Chinese to Spanish and then >>>>> Russian, and then to English etc.
>>>>> And some manuals that come in English are so poorly written, lack >>>>> helpful information and seem to be missing a great deal of actual >>>>> instructional information and are next to useless in any format.
>>>>> Grumpy Dave
> -- > They Ask Me If I'm Happy; I say Yes. > They ask: "How Happy are You?" > I Say: "I'm as happy as a stow away chimpanzee on a banana boat!"
>
-- Ann K. Parsons Portal Tutoring EMAIL: akp@... Author of The Demmies: http://www.dldbooks.com/annparsons/ Portal Tutoring web site: http://www.portaltutoring.info Skype: Putertutor
"All that is gold does not glitter, Not all those who wander are lost."
|
|
locked
Re: warning if you doing business
Sorry Ann, but I have no idea what you are talking about.
If you are bothered because I was laughing at Brian's Melt Down about not getting a Braille Manual with his New Gear, let it go. The fact was that I found his Fit to be both hilarious and ironic at the same time. And I still do.
If you care to discuss it, we can take it off list, as the reason why I was finding it all so entertaining has little to do with Tech issues, but more issues that show up way too often in the Blind Community.
As for me Fencing with someone, here again, if you are speaking to me, I have no idea what you are talking about.
Sorry, but I've never been all that good when it comes to reading Minds, especially the mind of a Woman. So, if what you said applies to me, and you still feel the need to speak with me about something, again, drop me a line off the list, unless it fits in the the subject matter on this list.
Grumpy Dave
|
|
fantastic deal on RoboForm
hi all. i have never posted any such deals or anything on any list but as this was a hard to miss deal, i thought i will just post it out there if you use RoboForm it can save you some money. if you click on. https://www.roboform.com/careyyou can get yearly or 5 years subscribtion for 60% off. a years subscription cost $9.55. if your subscribtion expires any time you can renew it using this deal. this deal is only up to 31-march-2020 hope this deal helps some1, i apologise if i am going against some list guidelines.
|
|
Hi Jan,
Usually that is server dependent. You will have to change your server settings something like as follows. this is good for Spectrum and will not be the same for other servers.
My pop3 is mail.twc.com with associated ports the imap is imap.twc.com with different associated poerts.
So if you have a pop3 and you want to change it to an imap, you would go into your existing account and make such changes. Again these references are specific to my server and no one Else's. Consult with your own ISP tech support or their online help pages.
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
On 3/7/2020 9:36 PM, jan howells via Groups.Io wrote: Is there a way to convert a Pop3 accsion to an Imap account and vice versa?
Jan
-- They Ask Me If I'm Happy; I say Yes. They ask: "How Happy are You?" I Say: "I'm as happy as a stow away chimpanzee on a banana boat!"
|
|
Re: firefox portable or full
The page to download Firefox portable
is:
There may be something on the page about
downloading the portable apps installer but don't worry about that.
I believe you should use the link that says
something like
Download from PortableApps.com
Its been a long time but I
believe that is the link to use.
Gene
----- Original Message
-----
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
Sent: Saturday, March 07, 2020 7:26 PM
Subject: [TechTalk] firefox portable or full
guys can anyone or jene share again
thanks
|
|
I suspect you have to set up another account.
As I recall, in Windows Live Mail, and I believe Outlook Express, the settings
won't let you change the kind of account it is and another account must be set
up.
I don't know if that is true of other e-mail
programs.
Gene
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Saturday, March 07, 2020 8:36 PM
Subject: Re: [TechTalk] spell checker
Is there a way to convert a Pop3 accsion to an Imap account and
vice versa? Jan
|
|
locked
Re: warning if you doing business
jan howells <gale7978@...>
I always told by family members that I am dumb, stupid, and incompetent. I had no self esteem. My family still thinks that because I cannot see. I was always degraded by my family. My aunt got hollered at by the Seeing Eye. She cried and blamed me. I did not tell her to degrade in front of them and answer questions during my interview at the same time while I was answering my questions. That was very awkward and embarrassing.
Jan
|
|