Hi David,
This is a great blog entry. I have a few thoughts about the situation.
I took a two-day introductory WindowEyes class and was impressed with a few features. I liked the mouse find function so I could interact with the desktop. I liked the interface with the Outlook calendar which made managing calendar entries much easier. In fact, the interface reminded me of the interface found on some notetakers. I have never been completely satisfied with the interaction between JAWS or NVDA and the calendar especially in Office 2013. Jaws especially sometimes loses focus or fails to speak the state of the calendar correctly. A case in point is the issue where a user has created an appointment lasting more than a day. When navigating the calendar by day JAWS will sometimes incorrectly announce the number of appointments for the day even when the user was looking at the calendar after an event was finished. I also find JAWS especially sluggish in Outlook in general. NVDA is somewhat better in this respect.
In my WindowEyes class I did not have a chance to try WindowEyes with a Braille display so I can't comment on that. One thing the trainers emphasized is that they wanted the user to be able to focus on the cursor or the mouse pointer, rather than having to be concerned by the extra cursors JAWS uses to navigate. I wasn't able to give WindowEyes a chance on my job as I needed access to Braille right away when I migrated to Windows. At that time WindowEyes didn't yet have Braille support.
Some other thoughts I have relate to the number of screenreaders on the market. I have always been perplexed by the fact that there is more competition in the Braille display market than there is in the screenreader market. The only caveat there is that for whatever reason Braille display vendors either decided, or were forced to rely on screenreaders to drive the displays. In this respect competition was somewhat limited based on the amount of cooperation Braille display vendors got from Freedom Scientific when the vendors wrote scripts for JAWS. I know of one case where Papenmeier was shut out of the scripting process even though they had some innovative ideas. I used to use a Papenmeier display but gave it up because of the lack of cooperation from Freedom Scientific. This display had some functions I have not found in any other display. Another case in point is the slow response on the part of Freedom Scientific to Hims when both of them were trying to write scripts. I have found that Braille display vendors can't implement as many features they would like into their scripts. I have also found that despite what Freedom Scientific claims, I have never gotten a third-party display to autoDetect when JAWS starts. I think I should have the right to use the display of my choice. When I configured my Hims Braille Edge with NVDA, I didn't have any problems at all either with the driver, or getting NVDA to detect the display.
Finally, I would like to point out that there are a couple of screenreaders out there, but I don't know how well they work. There is the Cobra screenreader from Baum which has been around since the advent of Windows and was sold with various names like Virgo, and ScreenPower. I never had a chance to try any version of a screenreader other than JAWS and NVDA and wouldn't consider it now. There is also Hal, the screenreader from Dolphin. Again, I don't have enough information to have an oppinion about it. Is there a significant enough user base where a person could get assistance from others when using either Cobra or Hal? I don't have the answers to these questions.
Based on my most recent experience, I think NVDA will have more staying power than JAWS. There is a vibrant user community where there are many blind people who have extensive knowledge of current sofftware trends. I find that when I call Freedom Scientific for technical support, that now their technicians seem less and less familiar with third-party Windows applications. In several cases I have missed career development opportunities because I simply couldn't find enough information anywhere to know how to configure JAWS with applications other than the Microsofft suite of programs. Even sofftware like AttachMate terminal emulation for an IBM mainframe emulation used to work well but now doesn't. When I contacted Freedom Scientific for technical support they had a rather cavalier attitude. They argued that since the scripts for AttachMate were developed by a third party, Freedom Scientific didn't need to support them. Freedom Scientific also claimed that nobody uses mainframe terminal emulation anymore. I know from personal experience that this is not true. Freedom Scientific also wasn't willing to work with Micro Focus, the vendor for AttachMate to resolve the issue despite the fact that I had a conference call with Freedom Scientific and Micro Focus. In order to do any work, I need to run two versions of JAWS so I can do mainframe technical support. Freedom Scientific also suggested that they could resolve the problem by sending us developers to write scripts to work onsite, and then charging us for it. I've never heard of a sofftware vendor not being willing to support any part of their product even when scripts for a particular application automatically installed with the product. I wonder what other screenreader vendors do in this situation.
I'm sorry my post is so long but I want to raise some important issues blind people should consider when selecting a screenreader.
Thanks,
Dan
Sent from my iPhone
> On May 30, 2017, at 3:13 PM, David Goldfield <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>
> The following is a blog post I just uploaded concerning my memories of
> Window-Eyes, as well as my feelings about its disappearance.
>
>
> On May 19, we celebrated Global Accessibility Awareness Day. It is
> ironic that, four days earlier on May 15, GW Micro (VFO) announced the
> news that the Window-Eyes screen reader would cease development. All
> users who were using the commercial version of Window-Eyes would be
> entitled to upgrade to JAWS, with users of version 9.0 or later being
> given the chance to receive a JAWS 18 license at no additional cost.
> Users of the free Window-Eyes for Users of Microsoft Office version,
> such as myself, are an exception and would not be entitled to upgrade to
> JAWS at a discount price.
> This news was both sad and, for many, hardly unexpected. After AI
> Squared became a part of VFO Group, Jonathan Mosen interviewed David Wu
> on Freedom Scientific’s FSCast podcast. Mr. Wu was formerly CEO of AI
> Squared and is now VP of Software Business at VFO. While Mr. Wu tried to
> keep the tone very positive and upbeat, reading between the lines made
> it clear to me that JAWS and Zoomtext were VFO’s primary products and
> Mr. Wu seemed a bit less reassuring when discussing MAGic or
> Window-Eyes, although these are clearly my own impressions of the FSCast
> interview from June of 2016. Maybe he didn’t mean to present that
> impression but that’s what I came away with when I heard the interview.
> Perhaps it’s true that JAWS is the world’s most popular screen reader.
> I’ve been a user of JAWS since version 1.0 shipped on several floppy
> disks, along with Eric Damery and Ted Henter providing tutorials on
> cassette tapes, and I’ve seen the program evolve into a powerful and
> capable screen reader. JAWS 18 is most definitely one of the most
> feature-rich screen readers you could install onto your Windows computer
> and its popularity is certainly well-deserved. However, one of the
> things which I value is consumer choice. While I regularly use Microsoft
> Office to perform the majority of my word processing tasks I am grateful
> that we have worthy alternatives, such as the free LibreOffice, to allow
> users to perform similar tasks using quality software. While I respect
> the feature set of Microsoft Outlook I prefer to use Mozilla Thunderbird
> for sending, reading and sorting email while I’m at home.
> The same is true for screen readers. I’ve already expressed my
> admiration for JAWS and feel that it’s an amazing access package.
> However, for financial reasons I use NVDA as my screen reader of choice
> and occasionally have used the free version of Window-Eyes for users of
> Microsoft Office. Consumer choice is an important thing when it comes to
> access. One screen reader may meet the needs of an individual more than
> another, for a variety of reasons. Sadly, VFO buying AI Squared has
> taken one of these choices away from us, which I feel is a tremendous loss.
> I’ve been a trainer and, to some extent, a user of Window-Eyes since the
> late 1990s. It offered some very unique features and capabilities which,
> in some ways, weren’t always available in other screen readers and I’d
> like to take some time to celebrate the unique features Window-Eyes
> brought to the table.
> First, let’s consider the way we browse the Web using our preferred
> browser of choice. Nowadays, screen readers are able to reformat complex
> Web pages and render them in the same way that a word processor opens a
> document, allowing the user to navigate the Web page using standard
> arrow key navigation. This is now a given and something we’ve come to
> expect when using a screen reader on the Web. This capability exists
> with JAWS, NVDA and in VoiceOver on the Mac. However, it was Window-Eyes
> which first offered this feature, a year or so before JAWS implemented
> it, if memory serves. True, in those early days it took a long time for
> some Web pages to load and so the feature wasn’t always a joy to use.
> Admittedly, when JAWS implemented the feature they did it much better in
> those days, with Web pages loading very quickly. Over the years,
> Window-Eyes improved by also loading pages much faster but the point is
> that Window-Eyes pioneered that feature which we all take for granted now.
> Window-Eyes was also the first screen reader to support Mozilla Firefox,
> something which we now enjoy with JAWS as well as NVDA.
> Window-Eyes is probably the only screen reader with the capability of
> launching with speech, when possible, in safe mode. This is a feature I
> have yet to encounter in other screen readers.
> If your system’s volume was muted or at a low level, Window-Eyes could
> be configured to load, forcing the volume to be unmuted and raising the
> volume level. This solves the problem where someone accidentally or
> intentionally muted your speakers, causing a minor nightmare when you
> tried to load your screen reader and receive no speech output. These are
> capabilities I’d love to see in other screen readers, such as NVDA and
> JAWS.
> One of my favorite Window-Eyes features is actually something which was
> probably in the earliest versions and was also found in the Vocal-Eyes
> screen reader for DOS. The feature to which I’m referring was known as
> cursor keys. It differed from the other hotkeys in that, with hotkeys,
> the function you assign to a key bypassed that key’s original function.
> In other words, if you assign the hotkey ctrl+L to read the current line
> under the caret or cursor the line would be spoken when the key was
> pressed. However, if you pressed that hotkey while in Word to left
> justify your text the key wouldn’t function, instead reading the current
> line (unless you used the Bypass key first.) However, the cursor keys
> feature was unique in that the original function of the key you chose to
> define would not be lost. Therefore, if you wanted the Home key to speak
> the current character you could assign that function to the Home key,
> without interfering with the key’s original function. When the key was
> pressed, the key would move the cursor to the beginning of the line as
> designed, followed by the function or functions you assigned to that
> key. This allowed for some amazing flexibility which is not even
> available with JAWS, unless you’re willing to learn scripting.
> Speaking of scripting, I’ll end my Window-Eyes memories with a
> discussion of that program’s most amazing feature, utilized in a way not
> found in other screen readers.
> Starting with version 7.0, Window-Eyes added the ability for its users
> to write customized scripts in order to add additional functionality to
> the screen reader. Many people may be quick to remind me that JAWS has
> had this feature since the very beginning, first with giving users the
> ability to write macros and, starting with JFW version 3.0, calling them
> scripts. While this is true, there are some differences in the way this
> capability was being offered.
> First, GW Micro allowed its users, as well as their staff, to upload
> scripts to a central repository on their Web site known as Script
> Central. Later, they made the brilliant decision to do a bit of
> rebranding and scripts, which sound scary and challenging, became apps,
> which sound like a lot of fun. Let’s face it; nobody knows anything
> about what a script is but anybody with a smartphone or tablet is an
> expert on apps. With this change, Script Central became App Central and
> Window-Eyes had its very own, user-friendly app store. Apps were quite
> plentiful, grouped into categories and users could add their own
> comments on the various apps which they liked. Window-Eyes even came
> with an app which allowed for easy navigation to this specialized app
> store. Apps could then easily be downloaded and installed, using similar
> screens which you would encounter when installing any piece of software.
> You could navigate through the Window-Eyes Apps menu to examine the list
> of apps you had installed and could easily remove apps you no longer
> wanted. Apps could even alert you when they had updates and those
> updates could easily be installed. The concept was positively ingenious.
> I never understood why JAWS, with its powerful scripting language, never
> offered a similar repository. In the screen reader’s early days
> Henter-Joyce did offer some scripts on its Web site but this is no
> longer the case. If you want to locate scripts for your copy of JAWS you
> must locate them on third-party Web sites.
> To be quite honest, Window-Eyes was far from perfect. In spite of its
> innovative features there were times when I felt I was using a not quite
> ready for prime-time beta, rather than a final release. Of course, no
> software is without its bugs but, to me, it always felt as though
> Window-Eyes had more than its share of them and I sometimes found it to
> be frustrating to use.
> In spite of this I still feel that the assistive technology landscape
> has been greatly diminished at having one less screen reader for users
> to work with. It is a regrettable consequence of AI Squared becoming a
> part of VFO Group and I am sorry for all users of Window-Eyes who are
> now forced to switch to a new screen reader.
> In closing, I would first like to ask VFO to respectfully consider
> donating the Window-Eyes source code to the community for further
> development. If you feel that you no longer wish to develop the screen
> reader please consider releasing it to the community as there are many
> Window-Eyes users who don’t want to see the demise of their favorite
> screen reader.
> Finally, I would like to thank the developers of GW Micro, both for
> their work with Vocal-Eyes for DOS as well as with Window-Eyes. You have
> made an important and memorable contribution to users of blindness
> assistive technology. I sincerely thank you for providing us with a
> unique, easy to use and customizable screen reader.
>
> --
> --
> David Goldfield, Assistive Technology Specialist Feel free to visit my
> Web site WWW.DavidGoldfield.Info
>
>
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>
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