Reminder: National Conference Call Tonight Wednesday September 9: 7 PM Eastern, 4 Pacific: Face To Face with Facebook

Reminder: Next National Conference Call for GTT will take place tonight, Wednesday September 9. Our topic for the night concludes our series on social media. 

In the spring, we had a presentation on twitter and one on linked in. 

Tonight, Leona Emberson from CNIB who was instrumental in the founding of GTT in Ottawa will tell us all about facebook. 

What it is, what it does, when and how to use it, and what are the most accessible ways to access it. 

Come one come all and learn about facebook. 

The time is 7 PM eastern 4 Pacific. 

The date is Wednesday September 9. 

The call in info is below. 

If you want more information, email gttprogram@gmail.com

Or call Kim at 

1-877-304-0968 This is the call in info for the conference call. Call in number: 

1-866-740-1260 

 Passcode: 5670311  

GTT meeting in Kingston Ontario

Hello everyone.

Last year, the Independent Living skills specialist at CNIB in Kingston, started a GTT group there.

These groups are continuing this year.

The first meeting will take place this Thursday September 10 from 10 AM to noon at the Kingston CNIB office.

The address is below.

Kim Kilpatrick (National GTT Coordinator) will be on the phone for this meeting to talk about GTT national calls, and also to help with a presentation on Blindsquare and other recent Iphone apps.

For more information and to contact Maryse, see her contact information below.

 

Maryse Theberge

Independent Living Skills Specialist

CNIB 

826 Princess Street

Kingston ON 

K7L 1G3

Tel: 613-542-4975 x5088

Fax: 613-542-8639

1-866-842-9071

Maryse.theberge@cnib.ca

Next national GTT conference call.  Face to face with facebook: Wednesday September 9. 

Next National Conference Call for GTT will take place on Wednesday September 9. Our topic for the night concludes our series for now on social media. 

In the spring, we had a presentation on twitter and one on linked in. 

Next week, Leona Emberson from CNIB who was instrumental in the founding of GTT in Ottawa will tell us all about facebook. 

What it is, what it does, when and how to use it, and what are the most accessible ways to access it. 

Come one come all and learn about facebook. 

The time is 7 PM eastern 4 Pacific. 

The date is Wednesday September 9. 

The call in info is below. 

If you want more information, email gttprogram@gmail.com

Or call Kim at 

1-877-304-0968 This is the call in info for the conference call. Call in number: 

1-866-740-1260 

 Passcode: 5670311  

The National Young Leaders Summit

The National Young Leaders Summit is an opportunity for young people living with vision loss to learn valuable leadership skills, connect with others and to help imagine and initiate a better future for those with visual impairments.

The Young Leaders Summit is open to Canadians aged 17-29 and will take place in Toronto on October 16th & 17th, 2015, alongside our Vision Quest educational session.

http://www.ffb.ca/VisionQuest/VQToronto15.html

The Summit is free to attend, and we are hoping to establish a scholarship to provide financial assistance. You can find out more about the summit and how to apply at http://www.ffb.ca/youthspace/YoungLeaders.html

on our website. Please note that all applications should be completed and forwarded to our Director of Research & Education, Dr. Mary Sunderland, no later than September 4, 2015.

Mary Sunderland, PhD

Director of Research and Education

416.360.4200 ext. 238

msunderland@ffb.ca

Guest blog post by Donna Jodhan (product review) easy to use recording device. 

This is the first of hopefully many guest blogs by Donna Jodhan who generously wanted to help and support GTT. I know she is busy and thank her very much for generously providing us with blog posts. We agreed that she would focus on products that may be more low tech in nature. Ones that are very easy to use and very user friendly. I am very excited about her participation in the blog and thank her very much for her generosity and support of GTT. The product Donna describes below can be found in Canada at the following link. 

http://www.braillebookstore.com 

August 31 2015

No need to be afraid of technology
Hi there! My name is Donna and every two weeks I promise to come into your inbox to share some tips with you on how you can overcome your fear of technology. This is my first blog and I thank my friend Kim for giving me an opportunity to visit with you.
Many of us did not grow up in the era of technology and it is probably why we are so hesitant when it comes to interacting with it. For me, I am somewhere in between and it never ceases to amaze me how much technology can change our lives. From the most basic of technology to the most sophisticated; it does not really matter.
I want to talk about some of the most basic technology in my blogs and I’ll start with a handy little gadget called “Talk to the Wilson.”
This little recorder can fit very easily into your pocket or purse. It contains just three very easy to find buttons and a very powerful little microphone. It operates on battery and you can even clip it to your belt. You can record up to 15 messages on this tiny recorder.
To make sure that you are holding the recorder in the right position, make sure that the speaker is towards you and it is the top part of the recorder. The bottom part is the smooth surface of the recorder. The clip is at the back of the recorder.  
From left to right, the buttons are: record, play, and delete.

So, hold down the record button (the leftmost button) to start recording and you hear a beep when you hold it down. Start recording as soon as you hear the beep and to stop just press the play button which is the middle button. You will hear a beep when you do this.
To hear what you have just recorded, press the play button again and presto! Clear as crystal! You can either press the play button again to interrupt your listening or wait for it to finish and you will hear a beep that signifies that the recording is over.
You can cycle through your messages by pressing the play button to start, stop, and go to the next recording.  
To delete, press the delete button while listening to what you wish to delete. This is the rightmost button. You will hear two sharp beeps which signify that your recording has been deleted.
To cycle through your recordings just keep pressing the play button.

Important notes:  

Your recordings cannot be transferred to a computer.

Once a recording is deleted it cannot be retrieved.

You can only cycle through your recordings and go forward.

You cannot go backward or skip recordings.
The Talk to the Wilson recorder is just a nifty little recorder for recording quick notes. The great thing here is that it is very handy and very easy to use.
So have fun now with the Talk to the Wilson recorder and see you in two weeks.

If you like audio mysteries and are looking for some affordable ones then visit my online store at http://www.donnajodhan.com/store.html
Have a super day

Donna

Guest blog post wanting to nominate GTT Ottawa for an award

This is a blog post written by Shelley Morris. She wants to nominate the Ottawa GTT program for an award. See her contact information below if you would like to support this nomination. I want to personally thank Shelley and all of you who help and support GTT. It means so much to have the blind community working together to help each other with technology. 

Hi Fellow GTT Participants,

 

Here in Ottawa, the Get Together With Technology program is as strong as ever. Along with regular monthy meetings, GTT members learn from each other, get one-on-one coaching and receive valuable, up-to-date information courtesy of the GTT Blog, Facebook and Twitter posts. If we have a concern, run into a bug, want information on the latest and greatest updates and searching for information on how technology can be made adaptable for blind/vision-impaired users, we know where to turn. No question is a silly question.

 

It is for this reason that I would like to nominate Ottawa’ s Get Together with Technology program for a 2015 Celebration of People Award—Education Award category. 

 

The Celebration of People is an award that is given to an individual or group that makes life better for those with disabilities in Ottawa. There are several categories in which to nominate. Please see http://www.celebrationofpeople.com for an overview. Awards are presented at a ceremony, typically held on December 3, International Day of Persons with Disabilities. 

 

I would like to invite you to help me to nominate the GTT to receive this award.

 

Here is what I will need from you:

 

I will create the covering letter and submit the application. 

–I will need two people to be references. If two people would like to come forward as references, that would be very helpful.

–All of you are more than welcome and definitely encouraged to write a supporting letter. The more letters and testimonials we have, the stronger our application will be. Have you benefitted from being involved in the GTT? How has it helped you? Have you been able to share what you have learned with others? Do you enjoy getting together with others who face the same challenges as you do? Do you have a good GTT story that you would like to share? Even if you don’t consider yourself a ‘writer’ an email will do. I will gather these and include them in the nomination package. 

 

There are two deadlines: The Early Bird deadline is September 14. The deadline for all submissions is October 14. 

 

If you wish to submit a testimonial, could you please have it to me by

 

WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 9.

 

For now, I would like to keep the submission to the Ottawa area as one of the criteria for nomination is that the recipient’s work must benefit those living in the Ottawa area. 

 

I would love to hear from you about this. If you have any questions or require more inforamtion, please do not hesitate to contact me

Shelley1776@rogers.com

 

I look forward to compiling the nomination. Fingers crossed we will be in the running and, possibly receive the award. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Shelley Ann Morris

http://www.wonwithone.com

Welcome To My World CKCU FM 93.1

http://www.ckcufm.com/wtmw

 

First GTT meeting in Sydney Nova Scotia August 12 7 PM Atlantic time. 

:
A first meeting to

Get Together with Technology (GTT)

AT

The McConnell Library – Sydney

On AUGUST 12th, 2015

At 7:00 PM

Community Room

For persons with vision loss

(total blind or legally blind)

Sighted volunteers are welcome

Sponsored by the Canadian Council of the Blind (CCB)

No experience with technology necessary – it is a time to learn and share ideas on technology

Contact: Louise Gillis at ccbpresident@ccbnational.net or call 902-304-1276 for more information

 

 

Call in info for the national call tomorrow night. 

Here is the call in info for our session on calendars tomorrow night August 12 7 PM Eastern.  So glad so many of you will join us. 

1-866-740-1260 

Passcode 5670311

Get Together With Technology (GTT) Victoria – August 5 2015 Meeting Notes

Get Together With Technology (GTT) Victoria – August 5 2015 Meeting Notes

The meeting took place between 5:00 and 7:00 PM, at Fort Tectoria, 777 Fort Street. The nine participants who attended were, Hannah, Marcelina, Trevor, Susan, Colin, Shari, Albert, Corey and Tom. We would especially like to thank Hannah for volunteering to be organizational assistant to Tom Dekker, who has also volunteered as Chapter Coordinator. Though a relatively small group this time, everyone was very much engaged through a combination of discussion, demonstration and general sharing of information.

GTT Community Outreach was the first topic. Should we develop a brochure or poster with a brief and succinct explanation of GTT? Would people be willing to help distribute it? Doctors’ offices, ophthalmologists and optometrists, seniors’ groups and accessibility departments at school boards and post-secondary institutions would all be great targets for our outreach. It was suggested that we also contact BC Blind Sports.

CNIB will do a mailing, but we would have to provide all the material, ready to go, including the funding to pay for postage plus a CNIB service charge per item.

An additional aspect of the outreach discussion confirmed the idea that evenings might not be convenient. We had tried the library hoping to acquire a daytime meeting place but were led to believe that booking space there would be quite expensive. And along with that, Fort Tectoria could not continue its offer of free space during business hours. But thanks to Sabina at NNELS (National Network of Equitable Library Services) we have begun correspondence with Andrea Brimmell at the library, to whom we have already applied for free space. We will keep you posted.

There was also a brief discussion around funding for interpreters for our deaf-blind participants. We are still waiting a response from a Lions club.

We were informed that there is a Victoria book club for vision-impaired people. Meeting participants wondered if there might be a way for GTT members to work with this group; i.e., helping readers to master various reading technologies. We would appreciate anyone who knows more about the book club to get in touch.

In this regard, the Victoria Public Library has specifically asked if one of our members who knows Zoomtext would be available to assist one of their patrons. He would like to use Zoomtext to read books online.

Next came a discussion around BC Transit’s decision to install a Trekker Breeze on each bus in its fleet. This solution is unacceptable, as it demonstrates zero adherence to 21st century principles of Inclusive Design now being implemented in cities in all First World countries as well as in developing ones. Where is the readout for the deaf and hard of hearing, or for the tourists who may read, but not understand English? Where is the real-time GPS and transit data feed that would make life easier for the hundreds of thousands per year who travel throughout the Capital Region with smart phones in their hands. What is the cost comparison between making buses wheelchair-accessible, as opposed to that for providing full audio/visual/transit feed access?

The Trekker Breeze is specifically designed as a personal device for non-visual access only; there is no visual display. It is an inadequate application of technology.

It was agreed that we should write to the Editor of the Times-Colonist with an expression of our concern. However, after the meeting some of us realized that we should first submit a request to ride on one of the test buses, express our concerns and get their response before preparing the letter. We have already contacted BC Transit toward this end.

A number of GTT members have expressed an interest in the Vocal Eye live event description service. This group uses an FM system to broadcast description to listeners equipped with a receiver and headset. This has been done at theatres in Vancouver and Victoria. They certainly did an excellent job describing the Vancouver Pride parade for a group of vision-impaired spectators.

These Vocal Eye enthusiasts were wondering how to rekindle a Vocal Eye presence in Victoria i.e. how to generate local funding for it. It was agreed that since Vocal Eye uses special technology to provide access, that this is therefore a technological application to which GTT could lend its sponsorship via our charitable number to raise the funds required. There will be further discussion on this topic to be reported at future meetings. Let us know if you are interested in this project. It was also suggested that we have Vocal Eye as the theme for either the October or November meeting and inquire if they would actually like to make a presentation.

This meeting featured a presentation by Hannah Leavitt, who described some of her favourite shopping web sites, many of which are run by people with vision-impairment or other disabilities. These included:

Braille Jewelry: http://www.jewelryinbraille.com/brands/Jewelry-in-Braille.html

TravelEyes – Travel Options for People with Visual Disabilities: https://www.traveleyes-international.com/

Future Aids – The Braille Superstore: http://www.braillebookstore.com/

The Chocolate Experience, Inc. E-mail: chocomelt@aol.com, http://chocolates.tripod.com/orderbraille.htm, or http://chocolates.tripod.com/order.html

Lucky Touch Fortune Cookies in Braille or Large Print – California School for the Blind: http://www.csb-cde.ca.gov/luckytouch.htm

Braille Wall Posters: http://www.cafepress.ca/+braille+posters

Blind Bargains – Deals and the latest news on blindness products: http://www.blindbargains.com/

The September meeting will feature a presentation by Sky Mundell, comparing the four most popular screen-readers: JAWS; WindowEyes; NVDA (Non-Visual Desktop Access); and System Access.

The meeting will take place on Wednesday, September 2. It will be at Fort Tectoria from 5 to 7 PM unless we are able to arrange an afternoon time and location at the library. We will keep you posted.

 

Reminder national conference call all about calendars. 

This is just a reminder of the national conference call taking place on Wednesday of this week at 7 PM Eastern.  The topic is calendars.  Someone asked if you needed to have a lot of high tech knowledge to come to this call.  Not at all!  However you schedule and keep track of appointments and to do lists, whether using high tech or low tech solutions, we would love to have you on the call. The call in info was posted previously but if you need it again, please email gttprogram@gmail.com 

Reminder: Upcoming first ever GTT meeting in Toronto! 

This is just a reminder that was posted in August.

I am very excited about GTT starting in Toronto.

Just a reminder too that if anyone is interested in starting a GTT and wants any assistance, contact Kim at

gttprogram@gmail.com

or

1-877-304-0968

See below for an exciting notice about GTT starting up in Toronto. I was honoured to be part of that first conference call to plan logistics. There was so much energy and collaboration on that call. It is wonderful that so many groups and organizations are collaborating to make this happen. This was the case when we started up here in Ottawa. CCB, CNIB, AEBC, and other groups are all joining together to work on this. Thank you to you all and I can’t wait to hear more about your adventures. Hey Toronto, we’re Getting Together with Technology!A couple of years ago, CCB (Canadian Counsel of the Blind) partnered with Kim Kilpatrick and a program called Get Together with Technology (GTT), to encourage those who use adaptive technology – and those who would like to know more – to get together and share their knowledge. The result is that GTT groups have sprung up in CCB Chapters across the country, meeting regularly to talk and learn about the technological tools that can enable independence and help build confidence. We are pleased to announce that we are forming a GTT group here in Toronto!

Topics can range from relatively low-tech devices such as colour identifiers and Talking Book players, to tips on how to get the most out of your computer or the latest smart phone, and anything in between! GTT groups are self-directed, discussing topics brought to the group by group members. 

And don’t worry if you are not ‘tech savvy’. The idea of a GTT group is that those with some knowledge will share that knowledge with the rest of the group.  

There are 3 things you can do to get connected to this incredibly powerful resource:

1. Come to our first meeting! Our first meeting will be held on Thursday, September 17th from 6-8 PM at the CNIB national office at 1929 Bayview Avenue. The topic for the first meeting will consist of participant introductions, and what you hope to get out of participation in a GTT Group.  The rest of the meeting will consist of a brainstorming session to generate specific topics for future meetings, and to rank these, setting a schedule of topics for the next few meetings. Meetings will be held on the third Thursday of each month between September and June. For more information, you can send an email to gtt.toronto@gmail.com.

2. You can subscribe to the GTT blog, a wealth of information about various technologies, with detailed descriptions on how to make the most of them. To get information about upcoming GTT meetings and conference calls as well as meeting notes and resources, please subscribe to the GTT blog. To register, visit the web page below. Look near the bottom of the page for a heading called, “Follow “GTT Program blog and resources” and leave your email address in the edit field below that heading. You will receive an email message asking you to confirm that you wish to be subscribed, and clicking on the “confirmation” link in that message will complete the process. https://gttprogram.wordpress.com/ Or you can follow GTT on Twitter @gttprogram.

3. The GTT group run by the National Get Together with Technology coordinator, Kim Kilpatrick, offers a national conference call-in once a month. If you’d like to participate in this conference call, please contact Kim by email at gtt@ccbnational.net or by calling her through CCB National Office’s toll free line at 1-877-304-0968 for full details on how to call in to the conference. So get connected! Get together with Technology! And make the most of the powerful tools that can open up your world.

Reminder national conference call all about calendars on Wednesday August 12 2015 at 7 PM Eastern time. 

Our next national conference call is fast approaching. It will take place on Wednesday August 12 at 7 PM Eastern time. 

The topic this time is calendars. 

What are the most accessible calendar apps and programs for people who are blind or have low vision? 

How do you schedule and remember appointments? 

Join us for a lively discussion about this topic. 

Bring your tips, tricks, and questions. 

Here is the call in info:

1-866-740-1260 

Passcode 5670311 

For more information, call 

1-877-304-0968 

Or email 

gttprogram@gmail.com 

The Dropbox Intro

What is Dropbox?
A virtual hard drive
You can use it to share files between computers
It is multi-platform, so you can use it on Windows,
Mac, iPhone, iPad and Android
How Does it Work?
Sort of like a social network
You can invite friends to share folders with you
You can install it easily –
the installation process is fairly easy and accessi
ble. Note
that once you install dropbox, the dropbox folder w
ill vary on its location depending
on what operating system you use.
The more friends you invite to Dropbox, the more sp
ace you earn
If a friend invites you, they earn 500 MB of space
with the free service, 1TB of space
with the paid service, which is called Dropbox Pro
With the free service, you get up to 16GB of space
With the paid service, you get 1TB of space
-You can share folders to collaborate with friends
or provide public links to files or folders in
your dropbox so that non-users can access a file. M
ethods of sending shared files vary on
operating system.
The Mobile App
You can get it for free on the iTunes Store or Goog
le Play
You can open a file with the app, even play it on y
our phone
You cannot get more space if you install the app
If you want to get more space, you need to install
the desktop application
-Apps to Use in conjunction with Dropbox

VoiceDream reader, droptext, dropvox, access note,
VoiceDream writer, drafts, and many
other apps. A lot of commonly apps support dropbox.
Sometimes an app that exports to
dropbox will create its own folder within your drop
box and all files exported from that
application will be placed there by default.
-Notes about Dropbox Pro –
$119 a year, $12 a month, for 1TB of space
When you upgrade, the « yearly »
option is selected by default
More sharing control
You can restore files easily.
Updating Dropbox
This process varies on operating system.
The Dropbox Website is:
Excellent Help Centr

Top Tech Tidbits

Top Tech Tidbits is a weekly newsletter that discusses the latest assistive technology news. It is published by Flying Blind LLC. The information in this blog post was found in this newsletter. To check out Flying Blind go tohttp://www.flying-blind.comSeveral conventions and exhibitions were held last week in the U.S. and U.K. Sight  village is one such exhibition. This annual event is held in Birmingham and showcases many different products and services relating to technology, sport, and many other topics. To hear some of the content from Sight village go to http://www.insightradio.co.uk/podcast-feed.html?category=afternoon_edition The two annual conventions in the U.S. that were held this past week were the Nfb (National Convention Of The Blind) and Acb (American Council Of The Blind) conventions. You can find lots of  tech-related audio, including the latest news from Freedom Scientific, Ihabilitation, Duxbury systems, and so much more    from both conventions at http://www.blindbargains.com/audio/ You can find some tech-related audio from the Acb convention exclusively athttp://acbradio.org/acbconvention2015

TalkingFlix Farewell

We received an email with the following message

“This is our TalkingFlix farewell.

Two years ago we set out with a goal: launch a truly accessible audio described entertainment service. We worked tirelessly to secure the content and funds needed to start TalkingFlix, but we have not been successful.

We would like to thank you for your belief in us and for your support. We hope that in the future, we will welcome you again in another endeavour of ours.

Our site will soon shut down, but we will continue to search for ways to give audio described entertainment the attention it deserves. Since we do not know what the future has in store for our possible accessibility projects, we would like to keep your e-mail address archived. If you wish us to completely erase your e-mail from our archives, please click here: http://talkingflix.com/_delete.php?cancellink=z3nxx1zj4x7xpgmh1o9tu5zpdsq

Emerging Technologies

Emerging Technologies
Lo wViz Guide: Indoor Navigation for Blind and Visually Impaired People
Deborah Kendrick

It’s been more than a decade since I reviewed the first GPS (global positioning system) product designed for users with visual impairments. Walking through an unfamiliar neighborhood and hearing the names of the businesses I passed and the intersections I approached seemed nothing short of miraculous 10 or 15 years ago. Today, however, it’s rare to find a person, blind or sighted, who doesn’t own at least one way-finding device or tool for mapping directions from one point to another.

Sighted people always had the ability to look around to get their bearings, noting familiar landmarks and reading signs. For people with visual impairments, however, the concept of “looking around” was, and is, somewhat astonishing.

With a reliable GPS with braille or audio output, you can map directions for the friend giving you a lift somewhere, or access more detailed set directions for navigating new turf on foot.

For such navigation tools to work, however, your device of choice, be it a smart phone or specialty device, needs to be able to connect to satellites. You can navigate to the hotel, the doctor’s office, or the shopping mall, but once inside, devices often lose contact with satellites. A solution for indoor navigation has been on the wish list of many of us for years.

Dan Roberts, founder and president of MD Support (the MD stands for macular degeneration, the disease that compromised Roberts’ own eyesight 20 years ago), built a 1,000-page Internet-based support resource for people who are blind and who have low vision. He noticed that smart, competent people with vision loss would struggle for orientation information in short-term settings like conferences and seminars. Consequently, he began researching to find a solution to the indoor navigation problem.

Indoo.rs
Roberts discovered that a solution for indoor navigation had been developed and installed in train stations and other venues in some European countries. Finding your way around an enormous venue like a cruise ship, a hospital, or an Ikea store is, after all, by no means a challenge unique to blindness. In such large and complicated venues, sighted people struggle with how to find a desired destination or, for that matter, their rooms or an exit.

Indoo.rs, a mainstream way-finding company, is headquartered in Vienna, Austria, with offices in the United States and elsewhere. The company has installed a number of indoor way-finding systems. Its efforts to date, however, have focused on permanent installations that establish an indoor navigation system in a specific facility with the intention of that system being used by many over a long period of time.

On behalf of MD support, Dan Roberts approached Indoo.rs with the idea of developing a “white label” app for iPhone users with visual impairments. His primary challenge was to persuade this company to allow him to take this “technological ball” and run with it in another direction, namely installations of a temporary nature, providing indoor navigation in venues where conferences, seminars, and other special events are held that attract a number of blind and low vision people.

By no means the first attempt at developing an audio indoor navigation system for people who have visual or cognitive disabilities, LowViz Guide, the app eventually developed by Indoo.rs and MD Support, is unique in that it takes advantage of equipment many people already possess: an Apple iPhone or other iOS device.

How LowViz Guide Works
Small iBeacons, about the size of a D-cell battery, are mounted on all points to be identified within an indoor environment. Your iOS device can recognize these iBeacons via Bluetooth.

In a conference hotel, iBeacons may identify the names of meeting rooms, men’s and women’s rest rooms, coffee stations, ATM machines, the hotel’s registration desk, and the like.

In order to identify the points that should carry iBeacons, Dan Roberts downloads a map of the venue, finds the important landmarks in advance, and records a message for each iBeacon.

After installing the LowViz Guide app on your phone, and traveling to a destination where iBeacons have been installed, you can navigate to these points. Every screen of the LowViz app has three tabs at the bottom: Map View, Categories, and Search.

If you select the Search tab, the keypad appears, including the Dictate button as in any other app. You can then type or use dictation to search for, say, “Chicago Room.”

If the Chicago Room is one of the landmarks included in the mapping of this particular venue, you will then hear spoken directions, giving you a step-by-step road map for finding your desired location.

As you move toward your desired location, the phone will emit a tone, getting lower in pitch as you move closer to your destination.

Free Installations During the Pilot Phase
Although Dan Roberts says that the cost of an installation is extremely high, MD Support has received generous grants to cover all costs for initial installations. In its pilot phase, MD Support will install LowViz Guide entirely free to conferences and seminars whose organizers request it.

Its first appearance was in Atlanta, Georgia in April 2015, at a disability rights symposium. There were only about 20 people with visual impairments at this particular event, which Roberts says was ideal since the small number enabled him to work with each participant individually.

The results were more than satisfactory. Participants could stand in one location, identify a destination (even on the other side of a wall), and then use the LowViz Guide app to walk there safely and independently.

How to Test Drive the LowViz Guide App
At this writing, MD Support has made commitments to install LowViz Guide at the American Council of the Blind convention to be held in July 2015 in Dallas, Texas, and at the Guide Dogs for the Blind reunion to be held in September 2015, in Portland, Oregon.

To use the app in a venue that has a LowViz Guide installed, participants need to have an iPhone or other iOS device with the free app downloaded.

Any blind person who travels knows well the frustration and time that can go into figuring out the layout of an enormous hotel or other conference venue. The idea that we, as blind people, might now have an opportunity to show sighted participants the way to the exhibits is more than a little exhilarating.

Time and experience will tell how well this new system really works, but kudos are definitely in order to MD Support and Indoo.rs for the effort.

To request LowViz Guide at a conference or seminar for blind and visually impaired participants or to learn more about the project, go to the MD Support website or e-mail Dan Roberts.

___________________________________

BlindShell mobile app

BlindShell, the mobile phone for visually impaired users that was developed in cooperation with Czech Association of Blind and Visually Impaired (SONS) is experiencing rapid growth. Schools, business partners and organizations all across the Europe are impressed and interested to spread BlindShell among blind people. Want to find our why is this solution so interesting for blind people?

View Site Below

http://us11.campaign-archive2.com/?u=b8d375c29e4846151ed81ddc3&id=efdb9613d7&e=b3d3451d6d

Blindsquare

GTT Victoria Meeting Summary, March 4, 2015

On March 4th the GTT Victoria group met at Fort Tectoria for the first time. This technology based company has agreed to host the GTT meetings through the spring time to see how our aims might fit with theirs. The new location was found to be very well situated on Fort Street between Douglas and Blanchard, and boasts a fine coffee shop as participants enter the building. They also offer a great lounge where people can gather over a cup of coffee to talk about technology, and use their super high speed internet wireless connection.

During the meeting about 10 people signed up as members of the Canadian Council of the Blind as GTT Victoria members. The next meeting will confirm a GTT Coordinator for this group, as well as a note taker and communications distribution guru.

The second part of the meeting had some people gathering in small groups to learn more about the iDevices they brought to the meeting. As this was our first time in Fort Tectoria, we did notice that the requested room configuration wasn’t quite optimum for our use. Some ideas were generated that will be implemented for the next gathering. Namely, we will allow more space around the perimeter of the room for people to more easily move about. If any of you have additional ideas to share please contact Albert by commenting on this post or replying to the email message.

Once again, let us thank over Twitter and Facebook those people who have generously offered us this fine location to meet for the months of March, April, May and June. Their Twitter and Facebook links can be found at:

http://forttectoria.ca/

Respectfully submitted,

Albert Ruel

250-240-2343

GTTWest2015@gmail.com

Windows 10 – two weeks out!

22 Point's avatar22 Point Blog!

Ok, here is your fifteen day heads up about Windows 10! That’s right, the operating system that is quite likely to be as ubiquitous in a couple of years as Windows 7 still is today is barely a fortnight from it’s prime time debut.

So, is it ready for the spotlight? And should you leap onto the bandwagon and download it on day 1?

Well I’ve had some great chats with people this week about Windows 10 – you can hear my dulcet tones chatting with Byron Lee on the 7th July edition of The Talk Zone (and do check out the rest of Byron’s site and his other shows as well), and also the team at Cool Blind Tech I don’t think that one’s up yet – but you can subscribe to their podcast and they have heaps of good info as well on all things blindness, techy and…

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Screen reader Survey!

Hello everyone.
If anyone is interested, here is a screen reader survey you can do to help companies and groups better understand how you use your screen reader.

survey URL –

http://webaim.org/projects/screenreadersurvey6/