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From:
David Goldfield <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
David Goldfield <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Mon, 7 Jul 2014 14:14:29 -0400
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Just got this ...

An Address to the National Federation of the Blind Convention 2014
July 7, 2014 5:02 am
The following speech was given by Michael Curran on the 6th of July 
2014, to attendees at the National Federation of the Blind’s 2014 
convention in Orlando Florida. NV Access wishes to thank the NFB for 
providing funding for Michael’s attendance.
The NVDA screen reading software is changing the lives of blind and 
vision impaired people across the globe, by providing them with a free 
alternative to commercial screen readers, that may be either too 
expensive or not available in their location or language. It is enabling 
these people to independently use computers to produce written content, 
read news, socialise, shop and bank online, and, most importantly, 
actively participate in education and employment.
It is developed by users, for users.
NVDA is used by both the young and old.
It is used at home, at school, at university, in the workplace and on 
the go.
It supports over 40 languages.
It can be run portably, with out the need for installation.
NVDA is open source software. We have received contributions of code, 
documentation and translations from over 140 people from across the world.
NVDA is downloaded roughly 60000 times each release, with over 17000 
users depending on the product each and every day, spanning over 160 
countries. As NVDA is free for anyone, the greatest impact is for people 
living in developing countries where it is often impossible to access a 
commercial screen reader. However, even in the developed world, NVDA is 
having a significant impact. The second highest country for NVDA usage 
is the United States, suggesting that even here, there are people for 
whom NVDA is a necessity, due to the prohibitive cost of other products.
Over the past several years, we have continued to strive to ensure that 
NVDA is a fully featured solution for not only those who have no other 
option, but also for those who simply like choice.
For anyone who hasn’t looked at NVDA in the last two years or so, some 
of the major changes and improvements have been:
* A repackaged download, allowing you to install or create a portable 
copy, all from one file.
* Automatic updates, ensuring that you always have the latest and 
greatest NVDA when it becomes available.
* Support for NVDA add-ons, allowing you to add optional features 
created by others in the community.
* Support for Asian character input and improved support for reading 
right-to-left languages such as Arabic.
* Support for Microsoft Powerpoint, allowing you to both read and edit 
Powerpoint presentations. Special thanks goes to the NFB and several 
other blindness agencies, for contributing financially to this 
particular project.
* Microsoft Word enhancements including: support for graphics, form 
fields, revisions and comments.
* A Configuration profiles manager, allowing you to create and switch 
between multiple configurations for different applications or situations.
Other developments have included: support for touch screens on Windows 
8; computer braille input; support for many more braille displays; 
customisation of keyboard, braille display and touch commands; 
enhancements and fixes to web page and pdf content; stability fixes; and 
much more.
As a small taste of what is coming for the next release, Some 
enhancements you can look forward to particularly in regards to 
Microsoft Office are:
* Support for the Outlook Calendar
* less verbose reading in the Outlook inbox and other message lists.
* a new command to read the current comment in both Microsoft Word and Excel
* Microsoft Word specific enhancements including:
* reporting of paragraph indenting
* Reporting of distance from the left edge when pressing tab
* Feedback in speech and braille for most formatting shortcut keys 
(bold, italic, underline, alignment, etc.)
* Automatic column and row header reading in tables where the author has 
specified headers compatible with Jaws.
* Improved automatic column and row header reading for Excel including 
setting headers for multiple regions and per-worksheet storage 
compatible with Jaws
Some other features that will be available in the not too distant future 
are:
* Improved support for Rich text editing in web browsers, Further 
enhancing the accessibility of products such as Google Docs, Office 365, 
and other content editors.
* Access to complex math equations in web browsers and Microsoft Office, 
Via Design Science’s Math Player Alpha, allowing for meaninful 
navigation within equations, with feedback in both speech and braille.
In conversations almost 10 years ago,my close friend James Teh and I 
talked as blind people, about the possibility of a fully featured free 
Screen Reader for Windows. Due to the high cost of commercial products, 
there was unfortunately a fair amount of illegal usage of the existing 
commercial products. Given the importance of access to computers, it was 
difficult for many to resist doing this. However, both of us realized 
that in addition to the obvious legal and ethical reasonsagainst 
software piracy, this approach simply ignores the underlying problems of 
screen reader cost and availability. Blind people, regardless of their 
economic status, should not have to break the law just to be able to use 
computers and gain independence.
The idea of a free screen reader was not new. There were several free 
screen readers for Linux and Apple at that time was introducing 
VoiceOver to the Mac. There were even some free options for Windows, but 
they were either extremely limited or abandoned. Another group had a 
similar dream to ours, but their projet seemed to never get off the ground.
In April 2006, While just out of university,And, also out of a job,I 
decided to start working on the NVDA screen reading software. I 
certainly wasn’t the best programmer around,But previous life 
experience, And participation in Blind Citizens Australia taught me,That 
if you want or need something,Someone, has got to start it some time. 
Although perhaps a little skeptical about the chance of success at 
first, James Teh joined me on the project in July that year, and 
together we have worked as lead developers for the last 8 years.
There were many reasons we developed NVDA as a free and open source 
project. The first was because this enforced the ideal that it would 
always be freely available to anyone who needed it. Second, based on our 
previous experience with open source software, we knew that a project of 
this size and complexity could really benefit from input and 
contributions from the community. Finally, we believed that for too 
long, screen reading techniques had been locked up in the proprietary 
world. Each time a new screen reader project was started, programmers 
had to re-invent the wheel. There was no reference, no baseline from 
which to start. NVDA would be a chance to open this up and allow the 
blind and vision impaired community to access and learn from the code, 
knowledge and techniques that helped them access computers each and 
every day.
Although we understood well the issues around screen reader cost for 
ourselves and others in similar situations to our own, we did not 
appreciate at first just how much more of an impact NVDA would make on 
the blind in developing or non-English speaking countries. In these 
countries, commercial screen readers can be up to 4 times the price that 
we are used to, and sometimes the commercial screen readers are outdated 
or just not available in their particular language. This further spurred 
our efforts and led to a framework enabling translation of NVDA into any 
language by anyone so that everyone, regardless of language, can benefit 
from access to computers. We realised it was now imperative that we put 
in place infrastructure to ensure NVDA’s long-term continuation.
In 2007, James Teh, myself, and several other blind people,founded NV 
Access, an Australian-based non-profit organisation to develop and 
promote NVDA. NV Access raises funds through grants, donations, 
contracts and potentially other avenues in future. Among other things, 
NV Access employs us to work full time on the project, provides the 
technical infrastructure for the website and other online services, and 
allows us to offer related services such as support and consulting.
NVDA is now a world renowned screen reader used by tens of thousands, 
but its impact reaches far beyond the direct benefits to its users. It 
has helped to change the landscape of an industry where fully featured, 
free or low cost products were previously considered an unrealistic 
dream. It has provided greater competition in the assistive technology 
space, thus driving continued development and innovation. Both NVDA and 
NV Access have played a significant part in pushing the accessibility 
industry forward, particularly in the area of web accessibility. Because 
NVDA is free and unrestricted, more developers are able to test with a 
screen reader when implementing accessibility in their products, 
lowering even more barriers to accessibility. All of this ensures the 
importance and relevance of our work now and into the future, even 
despite the emergence of other free options such as Window-Eyes for 
users of Microsoft Office.
Today, NV Access still continues to actively develop NVDA. With the 
rapid pace of technology developments, we must continually update NVDA 
to ensure compatibility with the latest versions of Windows or other 
popular 3rd party applications. Aside from NVDA development, we are also 
focusing on several other areas in order to increase awareness and 
uptake for those who truly need it.
In order to best achieve our mission, NV Access needs to grow as a 
business and be sustainable into the future. Also, we need to grow the 
ecosystem of services and products around NVDA. Thanks to a grant from 
The Nippon Foundation, we have recently hired a General Manager who is 
focusing specifically on these issues.
The lack of official training material and technical support is 
something that many people have identified as a barrier to NVDA uptake. 
We recognise the importance of this and are working towards a solution. 
The hope is to firstly have a set of official text-based training 
materials available
in the not too distant future, with the aim of also putting in place a 
certification system around this training to ensure quality from those 
offering training in their own local communities. Ensuring the existence 
of training will allow the NVDA user to work more effectively with the 
product, get beginner users up to speed faster, and also quash a fair 
bit of ignorance around NVDA’s current capabilities. We are also seeking 
to partner with various blindness agencies, rehabilitation organisations 
and companies,including organisations here in the U.S,who could offer 
end-user technical support to NVDA users in their own compunities,and 
around the world. We already have a corporate support model in place 
which allows these organisations to receive second-level technical 
support, training or custom development from NV Access for a monthly fee.
Another major barrier to uptake is of course the speech. NVDA comes with 
the eSpeak speech synthesizer built in. It is extremely responsive and 
can speak in many languages. I myself use espeak all the time and there 
are many others who also do, especially in developing countries where 
other synthesizers are simply not available. However, we are very much 
aware of the reluctance of many to use eSpeak due to its apparent 
robotic ormetallic nature.
Perhaps the most popular speech synthesizer among screen reader users is 
Nuance ETI-Eloquence. IBM also incorporated the same engine in their 
IBMTTS product. Unfortunately, we have been unable to license this for 
use with NVDA despite several attempts to negotiate with both Nuance and 
IBM. Furthermore, both products are considered end of life. Nuance 
continue to wholesale Eloquence but do not provide support or updates, 
while IBMTTS can no longer be purchased at all. Also perhaps more 
unfortunately, we are aware that a significant number of users choose to 
use these synthesisers illegally. NV Access certainly does not condone 
this practice.
One potential solution we are pursuing is attempting to restart research 
into formant synthesis by developing a prototype Klatt synthesizer. If 
successful, it could be a replacement for those who cannot adapt to 
eSpeak but are comfortable with the sound of Eloquence or Dectalk. Like 
NVDA, it is being developed as open source software, ensuring that 
others can contribute and that the future of the product is not 
dependent on just one company. The prototype is already available in 
English and can be found on our Extra Voices web page, under the name of 
NV Speech Player.
The aim of NV Access has always been to lower the economic and social 
barriers associated with accessing Information Technology for people who 
are Blind or Vision Impaired. The company is thus dedicated to the ideal 
that accessibility and equitable access is a right and should be 
available to everyone, no matter their language, location or economic 
status. NV Access upholds this ideal through its continuing commitment 
to keep NVDA freely available to all blind and vision impaired people 
who need it. However, in order to best achieve this ideal, we, the 
blindness community, must work together. We welcome open and candid 
discussion with all in the blindness community, including the NFB, on 
ways we can ensure NVDA’s continuation.
There are still many blind people in the U.S. and otherwise who don’t 
have access to computers or the internet,Due to screen reader 
availability. In a 21st century context, for some this means the 
inability to participate equally in education, the inability to get a 
job, or the inability simply to socialise.
We believe that everybody, blind or not, has a duty and a right to 
contribute to society in some way. We implore organisations such as the 
NFB to work to ensure that all blind people have the necessary tools to 
do so. Let us also make sure that at least some of these tools are owned 
and controlled by the blindness community. Access to technology is 
essential, and we as blind people must play a significant part in 
shaping the future of that access.
I would like to thank ourcurrent primary sponsersincluding: Adobe, The 
Nippon Foundation, and Google. And to also acknowledge past support from 
Microsoft, And especially past support from Mozilla, with whom we share 
many values.
Finally, I would like to thank the NFB for the opportunity to speak 
today,And for your support of the NVDA project.
You can find out more about NVDA or download a copy, at
www.nvaccess.org
Thank you.

-- 

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         David Goldfield,
        Founder and Peer Coordinator

    Philadelphia Computer Users' Group for the Blind and Visually Impaired


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