Subject: | |
From: | |
Reply To: | |
Date: | Fri, 18 Oct 2013 14:07:29 -0400 |
Content-Type: | text/plain |
Parts/Attachments: |
|
|
exactly rift! there is NOTHING that requires these asshats to make their crap software accessible, and almost as bad is the fact that everywhere you go the computers are so locked down that in some cases you can't even adjust your speech rate and save the setting in jaws or window eyes!. OH, and IF you manage to find a vending place and it does not get wiped out by a doughnut shop in the lobby, it will already be someone else's turf
On Oct 18, 2013, at 10:04 AM, Richard Fiorello <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> Hi;
> I was trying to be on my good behavior but can't resist. Personally
> they should have saved the paper and done something more substantial.
> After I retired in 2007 got board and went looking for a retirement job.
> Didn't want to many hours and didn't need any excess stress. I was
> primarily looking at call centers since I can talk on the phone and use
> a computer. Guico which you have all seen on the tube has a call center
> in the area and never hired a blind person. A local bank hired a girl
> at their call center who fell in love and left. I started working at
> something called roswell park cancer institute. The job would certainly
> not have been my choice for my life's work but this was for extra cash.
> Discovered that lots of their software wouldn't work with window-eyes
> or in some cases they simply refused to try it with window-eyes because
> their software had issues and there were concerns that a screen reader
> might make things worse. There was some of their software that was
> usable and I've been doing my part time thing for a while. They
> recently came out with a new program and when you go through the
> material you have to read there are about four scanned words. Why these
> words were scanned in rather than put in via txt is a mystery but it
> made that little project unusable. There are lots of potential jobs out
> there thanks to the computer but companies or hospitals especially those
> living on grant money should be required to make their software usable.
> So we have lots of new jobs that in many cases can't be done by a blind
> person because of software issues and older jobs that many uf us may
> have never considered such as vending and tuning are going away. Don't
> think a vender in a hospital has much of a chance when a Duncan
> doughnuts opens in the lobby.
> To end on a positive note, however, if anyone out there is job shopping
> the trick is to stay in the market and sooner or later something will
> come up.
> --
> richard
|
|
|